October
3, 2023
By SPIE--INTERNATIONAL
SOCIETY FOR OPTICS AND PHOTONICS
Solar’s Slim Solution: The Rise of
High-Efficiency Thin Silicon Cells
A new study has significantly increased
the efficiency of thin c-Si solar cells, potentially leading to more
affordable and widespread solar power adoption.
Scientists developed an innovative multilayered design to
significantly boost the performance of next-generation solar cells.
Solar power has become indispensable in our global pursuit of clean
energy and sustainability. Today, about 95 percent of solar cells are
made using crystalline silicon (c-Si). Most commercial designs employ
a c-Si photoactive layer with a thickness of around 160–170 μm.
However, since silicon alone makes up nearly half the cost of each
solar panel, experts believe that next-generation c-Si solar cells
will be much thinner.
Unfortunately, despite a few recent improvements, the conversion
efficiency of thin c-Si solar cells still lags far behind that of
thick industrial ones. This problem stems from the fact that the best
design strategies for thin c-Si cells only maximize individual
parameters, such as short-circuit current density, open-circuit
voltage, or fill factor. None of the current methods can
simultaneously improve these parameters, all of which are important
for realizing high efficiency.
New Research and Innovations
Against this backdrop, a research team from Hangzhou Dianzi
University, China, has developed a new strategy to achieve remarkable
efficiency improvements in thin c-Si solar cells. Their study,
published in the Journal
of Photonics for Energy (JPE), represents a significant
breakthrough in the field of silicon solar cell technology.
The proposed strategy optimizes a few key optical and electrical
characteristics, which the team identified to be responsible for the
differences in the reported conversion efficiencies of thick and thin
c-Si solar cells. Using commercial software programs, they ran optical
simulations of various thin cell designs. Through further experiments
using solar cells, the researchers arrived at an innovative
fabrication methodology that offers several advantages over
conventional techniques.
High-performance 20-μm-thin crystalline silicon
(c-Si) solar cell design uses much less silicon. Figures from the
report by Xie et al. include (left) a semi-finished c-Si cell on a
flexible steel substrate; (middle) a complete cell; (right) image of a
fabricated thin c-Si cell showing its flexibility. Credit: The
Authors, doi 10.1117/1.JPE.13.035501
Instead of using the silicon ingot cutting approach typically used to
manufacture thick c-Si layers, the team employed a layer transfer
method. They used hydrofluoric acid to
etch pores into a thick silicon wafer. This porous layer served as a
substrate to grow a 20-μm-thin
monocrystalline silicon layer, which could be easily detached and
transferred onto a flexible stainless-steel substrate.
Enhancing Performance Through Nano-Films
To enhance the optical and electrical performance of
the thin silicon layer, the researchers deposited multiple metal
nanofilms on both sides using plasma-enhanced
chemical vapor deposition—SiO2/SiNx/SiOx layers
and Al2O3/SiNx/SiOx layers
with a pyramidal texture on the sides facing the front and rear of the
solar cell, respectively.
The front SiNx/SiOx and
rear SiOx/SiNx layers
increased the light absorption of the silicon layer in the shorter and
longer wavelengths, respectively. This, in turn, enhanced the
short-circuit current density—a measure of the number of charge
carriers that can be generated and collected by the solar cell.
Compared with a standard solar cell used as reference, the current
density increased from 34.3 to 38.2 mA/cm2.
Furthermore, the SiO2 and
Al2O3 layers
provided high surface passivation, minimizing the recombination and
loss of generated charge carriers. This led to a higher open-circuit
voltage—a measure of the maximum voltage generated by a solar cell. It
was boosted from 632 mV in the reference cell to 684 mV when using the
proposed design. Consequently, the fill factor of the solar cell, an
indicator of how close a solar cell operates to its theoretical
maximum efficiency, increased from 76.2 to 80.8 percent.
As confirmed by both simulations and experiments, the proposed
strategy resulted in an enhancement of conversion efficiency from 16.5
to 21.1 percent, a remarkable gain of 4.6 percent (corresponding to an
approximately 28 percent improvement, compared to the reference cell).
This puts the efficiency of thin c-Si solar cells close to that of
their industrial thick counterparts, which today clocks in at 24
percent.
JPE Associate Editor Leonidas Palilis, Professor of Condensed Matter
Physics at University of Patras, Greece, remarks, “Overall, the
findings of this study present a novel way to realize high-performance
thin crystalline silicon solar cells using much less silicon—for a
20-μm cell, around one-eighth of the amount required for a thick
160-μm cell on a given panel size.”
This advance will likely contribute to more widespread cost-effective
adoption of silicon solar power technology, due to the reduced cost
and the concomitant expansion of the solar panel manufacturing
capacity.
Reference: “Investigation on significant efficiency enhancement of
thin crystalline silicon solar cells” by Guanglin Xie, Zhen Zhang,
Xinshuo Han, Shengjie Ma, Yue Zang, Lu Wang and Wensheng Yan, 12
September 2023, Journal
of Photonics for Energy.
DOI: 10.1117/1.JPE.13.035501
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