Current status and challenges for hole-selective poly-silicon based passivating contacts

Author:

Basnet Rabin1ORCID,Yan Di2,Kang Di1,Shehata Mohamed M.1ORCID,Phang Pheng1,Truong Thien1ORCID,Bullock James2ORCID,Shen Heping1ORCID,Macdonald Daniel1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Engineering, The Australian National University 1 , Canberra ACT 2601, Australia

2. Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, University of Melbourne 2 , Victoria 3010, Australia

Abstract

Doped polysilicon (poly-Si) passivating contacts have emerged as a key technology for the next generation of silicon solar cells in mass production, owing to their excellent performance and high compatibility with the existing passivated emitter and rear cell technology. However, the current solar cell architecture based on a rear-side electron-selective (n+) poly-Si contact is also approaching its practical limit (∼26%) in mass production. The full potential of doped poly-Si passivating contacts can only be realized through incorporation of both electron-selective and hole-selective (p+) poly-Si contacts. While studies of both p+ and n+ poly-Si contacts commenced simultaneously, significant performance differences have arisen. Phosphorus-doped poly-Si contacts consistently outperform boron-doped counterparts, displaying typically lower recombination current density (J0) values (1–5fA/cm2 vs 7–15fA/cm2). This discrepancy can be attributed to inadequate optimization of p+ poly-Si contacts and fundamental limitations related to boron doping. The poorer passivation of p+ poly-Si contacts can be at least partly attributed to boron segregation into the interfacial oxide layers, compromising the interfacial oxide integrity and reducing the chemical passivation effectiveness. This review critically examines the progress of p+ poly-Si contacts characterized by cell efficiency and J0 values, delves into existing challenges, identifies potential solutions, and explores some potential solar cell architectures to enhance efficiency by incorporating p+ poly-Si contacts.

Funder

Australian Renewable Energy Agency

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Reference204 articles.

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