a b s t r a c tRecombination active boron oxygen related defects typically limit the efficiency of solar cells made from boron doped, oxygen rich silicon. This limitation can be overcome by applying a regeneration process that requires slightly elevated temperatures, carrier injection, and the presence of hydrogen in the silicon substrate in order to regenerate quickly and completely.The influence of mid temperature steps up to 400 1C on the regeneration kinetics is investigated and the results can be explained with the efficacy of the regeneration process depending on the hydrogen bonding states prior to regeneration. Boron hydrogen pairs are found to be good candidates to be the relevant hydrogen source during regeneration. The long term stability of the regenerated state is tested under solar cell operating conditions, and the thermal activation energy of its destabilization is determined to be 1.25 70.05 eV.Limiting factors for high speed regeneration processes are discussed, and a high temperature/high illumination procedure is presented, allowing complete regeneration in less than 10 s. This makes regeneration feasible as an in line process in solar cell production.
When exposed to light, boron doped monocrystalline Czochralski grown silicon suffers from degradation of the minority carrier lifetime due to the formation of recombination active boron-oxygen related defects. The so called regeneration procedure is able to convert these recombination active defects into a new less recombination active state characterized by a higher minority charge carrier lifetime and stability under illumination. However, the exact working principle on microscopic scale is still unknown even though some influencing factors were identified. The role of hydrogen in the regeneration process is investigated in this work. We find that the characteristic regeneration time constant is subject to variation depending on the process parameters of a Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition a-SiNx:H deposition, namely the applied gas flows, as well as on the thermal history of the sample prior to applying the regeneration procedure. The positive effect of a short high temperature (800–900 °C) step leads to the idea that the presence of atomic hydrogen in the silicon bulk is crucial for the regeneration effect to occur. The different regeneration behavior of samples with variable thickness of a hydrogen diffusion barrier, namely an Al2O3 layer capped by SiNx:H, supports those results. Finally, the importance of hydrogen for regeneration is directly shown on samples having different hydrogen bulk concentrations due to direct hydrogenation in a Microwave Induced Remote Hydrogen Plasma reactor. A new model to explain the effect of the regeneration of boron-oxygen related defect centers based on the possible role of atomic hydrogen is presented.
This paper discusses developments in the mitigation of light-induced degradation caused by boron-oxygen defects in boron-doped Czochralski grown silicon. Particular attention is paid to the fabrication of industrial silicon solar cells with treatments for sensitive materials using illuminated annealing. It highlights the importance and desirability of using hydrogen-containing dielectric layers and a subsequent firing process to inject hydrogen throughout the bulk of the silicon solar cell and subsequent illuminated annealing processes for the formation of the boron-oxygen defects and simultaneously manipulate the charge states of hydrogen to enable defect passivation. For the photovoltaic industry with a current capacity of approximately 100 GW peak, the mitigation of boron-oxygen related light-induced degradation is a necessity to use cost-effective B-doped silicon while benefitting from the high-efficiency potential of new solar cell concepts.
The degradation effect boron doped and oxygen-rich crystalline silicon materials suffer from under illumination can be neutralized in hydrogenated silicon by the application of a regeneration process consisting of a combination of slightly elevated temperature and carrier injection. In this paper, the influence of variations in short high temperature steps on the kinetics of the regeneration process is investigated. It is found that hotter and longer firing steps allowing an effective hydrogenation from a hydrogen-rich silicon nitride passivation layer result in an acceleration of the regeneration process. Additionally, a fast cool down from high temperature to around 550 C seems to be crucial for a fast regeneration process. It is suggested that high cooling rates suppress hydrogen effusion from the silicon bulk in a temperature range where the hydrogenated passivation layer cannot release hydrogen in considerable amounts. Thus, the hydrogen content of the silicon bulk after the complete high temperature step can be increased resulting in a faster regeneration process. Hence, the data presented here back up the theory that the regeneration process might be a hydrogen passivation of boron-oxygen related defects. V C 2013 AIP Publishing LLC. [http://dx.
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