Title :
Limits to the efficiency of silicon multilayer thin film solar cells
Author :
Wenham, S.R. ; Green, M.A. ; Edmiston, S. ; Campbell, P. ; Koschier, L. ; Honsberg, C.B. ; Sproul, A.B. ; Thorpe, D. ; Shi, Z. ; Heiser, G.
Author_Institution :
Centre for Photovoltaic Devices & Syst., New South Wales Univ., Sydney, NSW, Australia
Abstract :
Thin film crystalline silicon solar cells can only achieve high efficiencies if light trapping can be used to give a long optical path length, while simultaneously achieving near unity collection probabilities for all generated carriers. This necessitates a supporting substrate of a foreign material, with refractive index compatible with light trapping schemes for the silicon. The resulting inability to nucleate growth of crystalline silicon films of good crystallographic quality on such foreign substrates, prevents the achievement of high efficiency devices using conventional single junction solar cell structures. The parallel multijunction solar cell provides a new approach for achieving high efficiencies from very poor quality material, with near unity collection probabilities for all generated carriers achieved through appropriate junction spacing. Heavy doping is used to minimise the dark saturation current contribution from the layers, therefore allowing respectable voltages. The design strategy, corresponding advantages, theoretical predictions and experimental results are presented
Keywords :
elemental semiconductors; p-n junctions; refractive index; semiconductor doping; semiconductor materials; semiconductor thin films; silicon; solar cells; substrates; Si; dark saturation current; design strategy; external quantum efficiencies; grain boundaries tolerance; high efficiency; junction recombination; light trapping; long optical path length; near unity collection probabilities; open circuit voltage; parallel multijunction solar cell; refractive index; resistive losses; silicon multilayer thin film solar cells; substrate; Charge carrier processes; Crystalline materials; Crystallization; Nonhomogeneous media; Optical films; Photovoltaic cells; Semiconductor thin films; Silicon; Solar power generation; Substrates;
Conference_Titel :
Photovoltaic Energy Conversion, 1994., Conference Record of the Twenty Fourth. IEEE Photovoltaic Specialists Conference - 1994, 1994 IEEE First World Conference on
Conference_Location :
Waikoloa, HI
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-1460-3
DOI :
10.1109/WCPEC.1994.519954