Effect of Impurities and Defects on Performance and Degradation of Solar Cells
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The solar photovoltaic (PV) industry continues to be one of the world’s
fastest growing industries. The global industry ended 2008 with over 8 GW
of PV modules manufactured.
Any mature solar cell technology seems likely to evolve to the stage where
costs are dominated by those of the constituent materials. First generation
solar cells had high production costs with moderate efficiency. Second
generation cells offer much lower overall production cost, but efficiencies
are even lower. Third generation cells aim at high efficiency and slightly
higher production costs. Therefore, different materials and technologies in
PV manufacturing have been used in an attempt to reduce manufacturing
costs.
Therefore, research in the field of solar cells is continuously increasing, in
order to fabricate high efficiency cells and using inexpensive materials and
technologies. In this dissertation, defect’s investigation has been performed
in solar cells. For this purpose, I report on research on different kind of solar
cells by the means of characterization, analysis and simulation. In the third
generation solar cells, impurity photovoltaic effect (IPV) was suggested
some time ago as a new approach to improve solar cell performance,
especially the short-circuit current, by using sub-band gap photons and
extending the infrared response. In this thesis, the IPV effect in silicon solar
cells with indium impurity level was reinvestigated, new results are given
using the software scaps, which was extended for this purpose in a joint
work between the two laboratories, ELIS (Gent, Belgium) and LPDS
(Béchar, Algeria). Also, for the first time to our knowledge, IPV effect was
investigated in wide band gap material (GaAs) with more than one impurity
level in the band gap of the semiconductor. New results have been obtained and published, showing the possibilities and also the limitations of the IPV
effect in solar cells.
Furthermore, some selected problems have been analyzed during my
research by use of numerical simulation. GaAs concentrator solar cells offer
the possibility of reducing the panel cost by using higher power incident on
the cell. However, the use of concentrator increases the temperature of the
solar cell, which reduces the cell efficiency if no special measures are taken
for cooling. In this perspective, the effect of concentration and temperature
on GaAs solar cell performance has been analyzed by simulation.
Micro thin film solar cells are good candidates for built-in power sources for
a new generation of MEMS (Micro-Electro-Mechanical-Systems). They
have the advantage of being small and light weight, and above all, a high
output voltage can be obtained with cell sizes on the order of micrometers.
For that reason, a number of single solar cells are connected in series to
produce the required high voltage. However, in this kind of cells (small area
mesa diode), the current due to perimeter recombination is very important
and can reduce the cell output. In this thesis, the perimeter recombination
effect was investigated in GaAs-based micro-solar cells. The calculations
obtained by scaps software were modified to take into account the perimeter
recombination effect which is a two dimensional effect.
The use of GaAs pin diodes in photovoltaic application has been recently the
focus of a lot of investigations, some of them being in multiple quantum well
solar cells. GaAs solar cells with different intrinsic layer thicknesses, were
fabricated at the Institute of electronic structure and lasers of the University
of Heraklion (Greece), and then sent to our University for electrical
characterization. Measurement numerical analyses have been carried out on
these cells in order to find a correlation between the quality and the thickness
of the intrinsic layer and the device performance.
Thin film solar cells are attractive because they could produce electricity
cheaper than conventional silicon solar cells. Absorber materials based on
amorphous and microcrystalline silicon (a-Si, μc-Si), on copper indiumgallium
diselenide (CIGS), and on cadmium telluride have been considered
as the prime candidates for thin film solar cells. The challenge is to reliably
and cheaply produce thin film solar cells at large scale and with a decent
efficiency performance. Some of these materials show excellent promise in
term of efficiency (this is the case for CIGS), whilst others excel in the ease
of large scale producibility (the case of a-Si and CdTe) . For example, CIGS
solar cells have shown the highest efficiency of any thin film cell with 20 % efficiency on a glass substrate, thereby largely exceeding the efficiency of
present day commercial silicon solar panels (η = 15 – 16 %). But, it remains
difficult until now to reach this level of efficiency in mass-produced cells.
Flexible solar cells offer distinct advantages over cells on rigid glass
substrate, in terms of manufacturability and application possibilities, and this
has motivated quite a lot of studies of these cells. However, the substitution
of a glass substrate by an alternative material results in reducing the device
performance, for both the low-temperature process on polyimide and the
high-temperature process on metal substrates. Metallic foil substrates offer
some attractive features when compared to plastic foil substrates, the most
important being that they can withstand the high processing temperatures
needed to optimize the CIGS materials quality. However, unwanted
diffusion of impurities from the metal substrate to the CIGS cell should be
avoided or be under control. Increasing activities to develop and to fabricate
flexible CIGS-based devices have been observed over the past years. PVFlex
Solar GmbH is a German company specializing in development and
manufacturing of flexible light weight solar panels. In the framework of a
European project, we received several flexible CIGS thin film solar cells
grown on different metallic foils with and without barrier layers. The
substrate structures were completed to CIGS solar cells by the Helmholtz
Zentrum Berlin (HZB; formerly called Hahn Meitner Institute, HMI).
Measurements and simulation have been carried out on these cells in order to
find a correlation between the properties of the CIGS devices and the
substrate treatment. Besides the electrical characterization, additional
measurements have been performed on these cells such as XPS and DLTS
characterization to investigate the nature of defects existing in these cells,
and limiting or not their performance.