23.5%-efficient silicon heterojunction silicon solar cell using molybdenum oxide as hole-selective contact

Publication date: Available online 16 January 2020Source: Nano EnergyAuthor(s): Julie Dréon, Quentin Jeangros, Jean Cattin, Jan Haschke, Luca Antognini, Christophe Ballif, Mathieu BoccardAbstractInterest in silicon heterojunction solar cells is growing due to their manufacturing simplicity and record efficiencies. However, a significant limitation of these devices still stems from parasitic light absorption in the amorphous silicon layers. This can be mitigated by replacing the traditional (p) and (n) doped amorphous silicon selective layers by other materials. While promising results have been achieved using molybdenum oxide (MoOx) as a front-side hole-selective layer, charge transport mechanisms in that contact stack have remained elusive and device efficiencies below predictions. We carefully analyze the influence of the MoOx and intrinsic a-Si:H thicknesses on current-voltage properties and discuss transport and performance-loss mechanisms. In particular, we find that thinning down the MoOx and (i)a-Si:H layers (down to 4 nm and 6 nm respectively) mitigates parasitic sub-bandgap MoOx optical absorption and drastically enhances charge transport, while still providing excellent passivation and selectivity. High-resolution transmission microscopy reveals that such thin MoOx layer remains continuous and, while slightly sub-stoechiometric, exhibits a chemistry close to MoO3. A screen-printed device reaching a certified efficiency of 23.5% and a fill factor of 81.8% is demonst...
Source: Nano Energy - Category: Nanotechnology Source Type: research