Towards bifacial silicon heterojunction solar cells with reduced TCO use

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

Can Han (TU Delft - Photovoltaic Materials and Devices, Shenzhen Institute of Wide-bandgap Semiconductors)

R Santbergen (TU Delft - Photovoltaic Materials and Devices)

Max van Duffelen (Student TU Delft)

P. Procel Moya (Universidad San Francisco de Quito, TU Delft - Photovoltaic Materials and Devices)

Yifeng Zhao (TU Delft - Photovoltaic Materials and Devices)

G Yang (TU Delft - Photovoltaic Materials and Devices)

Xiaodan Zhang (Nankai University)

Miroslav Zeman (TU Delft - Electrical Sustainable Energy)

L. Mazzarella (TU Delft - Photovoltaic Materials and Devices)

Olindo Isabella (TU Delft - Photovoltaic Materials and Devices)

Research Group
Photovoltaic Materials and Devices
Copyright
© 2022 C. Han, R. Santbergen, Max van Duffelen, P.A. Procel Moya, Y. Zhao, G. Yang, Xiaodan Zhang, M. Zeman, L. Mazzarella, O. Isabella
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1002/pip.3550
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 C. Han, R. Santbergen, Max van Duffelen, P.A. Procel Moya, Y. Zhao, G. Yang, Xiaodan Zhang, M. Zeman, L. Mazzarella, O. Isabella
Research Group
Photovoltaic Materials and Devices
Issue number
7
Volume number
30
Pages (from-to)
750-762
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

Reducing indium consumption, which is related to the transparent conductive oxide (TCO) use, is a key challenge for scaling up silicon heterojunction (SHJ) solar cell technology to terawatt level. In this work, we developed bifacial SHJ solar cells with reduced TCO thickness. We present three types of In2O3-based TCOs, tin-, fluorine-, and tungsten-doped In2O3 (ITO, IFO, and IWO), whose thickness has been optimally minimized. These are promising TCOs, respectively, from post-transition metal doping, anionic doping, and transition metal doping and exhibit different opto-electrical properties. We performed optical simulations and electrical investigations with varied TCO thicknesses. The results indicate that (i) reducing TCO thickness could yield larger current in both monofacial and bifacial SHJ devices; (ii) our IWO and IFO are favorable for n-contact and p-contact, respectively; and (iii) our ITO could serve well for both n-contact and p-contact. Interestingly, for the p-contact, with the ITO thickness reducing from 75 nm to 25 nm, the average contact resistivity values show a decreasing trend from 390 mΩ cm2 to 114 mΩ cm2. With applying 25-nm-thick front IWO in n-contact, and 25-nm-thick rear ITO use in p-contact, we obtained front side efficiencies above 22% in bifacial SHJ solar cells. This represents a 67% TCO reduction with respect to a reference bifacial solar cell with 75-nm-thick TCO on both sides.