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Design principles for high efficiency small-grain polysilicon solar cells, with supporting experimental studiesDesign principles suggested here aim toward high conversion efficiency (greater than 15 percent) in polysilicon cells. The principles seek to decrease the liabilities of both intragranular and grain-boundary-surface defects. The advantages of a phosphorus atom concentration gradient in a thin (less than 50 microns) base of a p(+)/n(x)/n(+) drift-field solar cell, which produces favorable gradients in chemical potential, minority-carrier mobility and diffusivity, and recombination lifetime (via phosphorus gettering) are suggested. The degrading effects of grain boundaries are reduced by these three gradients and by substituting atoms (P, H, F or Li) for vacancies on the grain-boundary surface. From recent experiments comes support for the benefits of P diffusion down grain boundaries and, for quasi-grain-boundary-free and related structures. New analytic solutions for the n(x)-base include the effect of a power-law dependence between P concentration and lifetime. These provide an upper-bound estimate on the open circuit voltage. Finite-difference numerical solutions of the six Shockley equations furnish complete information about all solar-cell parameters and add insight concerning design.
Document ID
19840040256
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Lindholm, F. A.
(Florida Univ. Gainesville, FL, United States)
Neugroschel, A.
(Florida, University Gainesville, FL, United States)
Sah, C. T.
(Illinois, University Urbana, IL, United States)
Date Acquired
August 12, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1982
Subject Category
Energy Production And Conversion
Accession Number
84A23043
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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