Conference Presentation (Invited) FZJ-2014-06512

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Light Trapping with Waveguide Modes in Periodically Nanostructured Thin-Film Silicon Solar Cells

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2014

MRS Spring Meeting, San FranciscoSan Francisco, USA, 21 Apr 2014 - 25 Apr 20142014-04-212014-04-25

Abstract: Thin-film silicon solar cells offer the advantages of low material and manufacturing costs. In order to enhance the absorptance of incident light in the optically thin silicon absorber layer, this technology requires advanced light-trapping concepts. Conventional devices apply randomly textured transparent conductive oxide substrates serving as light-scattering front contacts as well as reflective light-scattering metal back contacts. In recent years, several novel light-trapping concepts based on periodic nanostructures and periodically nanotextured interfaces, such as grating couplers, photonic crystals or plasmonic reflection gratings, have been suggested and prototyped. For these concepts the absorption of incident light in the solar cells is enhanced by light-coupling to waveguide modes which are supported by the silicon absorber layer of the solar cells but can be excited at the same time by incident light.In this contribution, our recent progress on light-trapping in periodically structured prototype thin-film silicon solar cells made of hydrogenated amorphous silicon and hydrogenated microcrystalline silicon is presented. The prototype solar cells show a superior light-trapping effect compared to solar cells applying the conventional random texture for light-trapping. To better understand this improved light-trapping effect, the coupling of incident light to waveguide modes in periodically nanostructured thin-film silicon solar cells is analysed in-depth. Therefore, the shape of the grating structure and the geometry of the unit cell of the two-dimensional periodic grating structure of the thin-film silicon solar cells are varied systematically and the excitation of the waveguide modes is studied. To characterize the coupling of incident light to individual waveguide modes, advanced characterization techniques, i.e. angular and polarization dependent spectral response measurements of resolution below 3 nm as well as near-field scanning optical microscopy, are developed and employed. Finally, based on our study new routes for improved designs of the periodic nanostructure of thin-film silicon solar cells will be outlined.


Contributing Institute(s):
  1. Photovoltaik (IEK-5)
Research Program(s):
  1. 111 - Thin Film Photovoltaics (POF2-111) (POF2-111)
  2. HITEC - Helmholtz Interdisciplinary Doctoral Training in Energy and Climate Research (HITEC) (HITEC-20170406) (HITEC-20170406)

Appears in the scientific report 2014
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 Record created 2014-12-03, last modified 2024-07-08



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