Issue 45, 2015

Increasing efficiency of hierarchical nanostructured heterojunction solar cells to 16.3% via controlling interface recombination

Abstract

Silicon nanostructures show great promise for use in photovoltaic applications, owing to their enhanced light-harvesting characteristics, which allow them to form radial p–n junctions for effectively generating/separating photoexcited carriers. They are also low-cost materials and thus suitable for producing solar cells. In this study, hierarchical Si structures consisting of microscale pyramids and nanoscale pillars were fabricated through wet anisotropic texturing and reactive ion etching. Further, these substrates, which had a core–shell structure, were used to fabricate radial heterojunction Si solar cells through interface engineering with tetramethylammonium hydroxide. The substrates were pretreated with a hydrogen plasma and subsequently subjected to amorphous Si thin-film passivation. This resulted in solar cells with a markedly higher broadband wavelength; however, the electrical properties of the cells almost remained unaffected. Further, the heterojunction solar cells, which had a hierarchical nanostructure and were fabricated using as-cut Czochralski n-type Si substrates, exhibited an efficiency of 16.3%, which is the highest ever reported for such cells.

Graphical abstract: Increasing efficiency of hierarchical nanostructured heterojunction solar cells to 16.3% via controlling interface recombination

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Aug 2015
Accepted
30 Sep 2015
First published
30 Sep 2015

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2015,3, 22902-22907

Author version available

Increasing efficiency of hierarchical nanostructured heterojunction solar cells to 16.3% via controlling interface recombination

F. Wang, Y. Jiang, T. Li, Y. Zhao and X. Zhang, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2015, 3, 22902 DOI: 10.1039/C5TA06846K

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