Radiation damage of gallium arsenide production cellsHigh-efficiency gallium arsenide cells, made by the liquid epitaxy method (LPE), have been irradiated with 1-MeV electrons up to fluences of 10 to the 16th e/sq cm. Measurements have been made of cell spectral response and dark and light-excited current-voltage characteristics and analyzed using computer-based models to determine underlying parameters such as damage coefficients. It is possible to use spectral response to sort out damage effects in the different cell component layers. Damage coefficients are similar to other reported in the literature for the emitter and buffer (base). However, there is also a damage effect in the window layer and possibly at the window emitter interface similar to that found for proton-irradiated liquid-phase epitaxy-grown cells. Depletion layer recombination is found to be less than theoretically expected at high fluence.
Document ID
19880047108
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Mardesich, N. (California Institute of Technology, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena; Spectrolab, Inc. Sylmar, United States)
Garlick, G. F. J. (Spectrolab, Inc. Sylmar, CA, United States)