Abstract
Thin HIT solar cells combine efficient surface passivation and high open circuit voltage
leading to high conversion efficiencies. They require a TCO layer in order to ease
carriers transfer to the top surface fingers. This Transparent Conductive Oxide layer
induces parasitic absorption in the low wavelength range of the solar spectrum that limits
the maximum short circuit current. In case of thin film HIT solar cells, the front surface
is patterned in order to increase the effective life time of photons in the active
material, and the TCO layer is often deposited with a conformal way leading to additional
material on the sidewalls of the patterns. In this article, we propose an alternative
scheme with a local etching of both the TCO and the front a-Si:H layers in order to reduce
the parasitic absorption. We study how the local resistivity of the TCO evolves as a
function of the patterns, and demonstrate how the increase of the series resistance can be
compensated in order to increase the conversion efficiency.
Subject
Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Condensed Matter Physics,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Cited by
2 articles.
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