Title :
Experimental matrix study of leakage current in nanopillar-based devices towards high-efficiency photovoltaics
Author :
Mariani, Giovanni ; Tu, Chun-Da ; Zhengliu Zhou ; Scofield, Adam ; Shapiro, Jeffrey ; Huffaker, D.L.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Univ. of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Abstract :
In this work, we present a detailed leakage current study on arrays of GaAs p-n junction nanopillars grown by MOCVD.[1-2] Nanopillar/nanowire-based photovoltaics are actively examined as highly efficient solar absorbers. To achieve highly-performing devices, however, a methodical understanding of the nature of leakage currents is needed.[3] Reducing leakage currents is key to improve the diode characteristic and open-circuit voltage under light, especially. This work considers a matrix of 5 × 5 different patterned geometries where pitches and diameters are changed to investigate trends in leakage currents. A 7.43% (AM1.5G) nanopillar photovoltaic cell is then experimentally demonstrated. Device characterization is carried out in terms of current-voltage (I-V) characteristics, temperature-dependent I-V, and external quantum efficiency measurements. FDTD simulations [4] are provided to substantiate the distribution of waveguided light within such solar cells.
Keywords :
arsenic compounds; finite difference time-domain analysis; gallium compounds; leakage currents; solar absorber-convertors; solar cells; FDTD simulations; GaAs; external quantum efficiency measurements; high-efficiency photovoltaics; leakage current; nanopillar photovoltaic cell; nanopillar-based devices; nanopillar-nanowire-based photovoltaics; open-circuit voltage; temperature-dependent I-V; waveguided light distribution; Gallium arsenide; Leakage currents; Metals; Nanoscale devices; P-n junctions; Substrates; Transmission line matrix methods;
Conference_Titel :
Photovoltaic Specialists Conference (PVSC), 2013 IEEE 39th
Conference_Location :
Tampa, FL
DOI :
10.1109/PVSC.2013.6745133