Title of article
C rystalline and thin-film silicon solar cells: state of the art and future potential
Author/Authors
Martin A. Green*، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
12
From page
181
To page
192
Abstract
Bulk crystalline silicon solar cells have been the workhorse of the photovoltaic industry over the past decades. Recent
major investments in new manufacturing facilities for monocrystalline and multicrystalline wafer-based cells, as well as for
closely related silicon ribbon and sheet approaches, ensure this role will continue well into the future. Such investments
suggest that the silicon wafer-based approach has successfully withstood the challenge mounted by thin-film chalcogenidebased
cells, in the form of polycrystalline films of CdTe and CuInSe , as well as that mounted by thin-film cells based on 2
amorphous silicon and its alloys with germanium. The encumbent now faces a fresh challenge by a new wave of thin-film
technologies developed in the 1990s, more closely related to the bulk approach and with some advantages over the earlier
contenders. One new approach is based on a stack of two silicon thin-film cells, one cell using amorphous silicon and the
other mixed-phase microcrystalline silicon. The second uses silicon thin-films in polycrystalline form deposited onto glass,
even more directly capturing the strengths of the wafer-based approach.
2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Journal title
Solar Energy
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Solar Energy
Record number
939167
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