Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells, Vol.147, 171-176, 2016
Impact of the phosphorus emitter doping profile on metal contact recombination of silicon wafer solar cells
Metallisation of phosphorus-doped silicon (Si) surfaces using screen-printed silver (Ag) pastes is a well established process and also a key process in the production of Si wafer solar cells. The metal-Si interface in a solar cell is a highly recombination-active region that impacts the device voltage. In this work, a facile test metallisation pattern with regions of varying front metal contact fractions is screen printed to create test cells on different phosphorus emitter doping profiles, all on commercially available multi crystalline Si wafers. On these and in conjunction with H-pattern cells and cells without front metallisation, intensity-dependent photoluminescence imaging is performed to extract both the metal-induced recombination saturation current densities and parameters related to wafer edge and peripheral recombination. It is observed that as the phosphorus emitter profile becomes lightly doped and shallower, the metallisation-induced recombination losses increase. The extracted metal recombination saturation current densities (J(01-metal) and J(02-metal)) on a 50 Omega/sq phosphorus emitter surface were 1800 fA/cm(2) and 10 nA/cm(2) respectively when compared to values of 2500 fA/cm2 and 120 nA/cm(2) respectively on a 130 Omega/sq phosphorus emitter surface. As a consequence of high metal recombination current density values for the lightly doped emitters of this study (130 Omega/sq), the solar cells fabricated from this group have a significant drop of 12 mV in open-circuit voltage values after front grid metallisation. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Phosphorus emitters;Metal recombination;Silicon wafer solar cells;Photoluminescence imaging