| Literature DB >> 26047260 |
Jian He1, Pingqi Gao1, Mingdun Liao1, Xi Yang1, Zhiqin Ying1, Suqiong Zhou1, Jichun Ye1, Yi Cui2.
Abstract
Hybrid silicon/polymer solar cells promise to be an economically feasible alternative energy solution for various applications if ultrathin flexible crystalline silicon (c-Si) substrates are used. However, utilization of ultrathin c-Si encounters problems in light harvesting and electronic losses at surfaces, which severely degrade the performance of solar cells. Here, we developed a metal-assisted chemical etching method to deliver front-side surface texturing of hierarchically bowl-like nanopores on 20 μm c-Si, enabling an omnidirectional light harvesting over the entire solar spectrum as well as an enlarged contact area with the polymer. In addition, a back surface field was introduced on the back side of the thin c-Si to minimize the series resistance losses as well as to suppress the surface recombination by the built high-low junction. Through these improvements, a power conversion efficiency (PCE) up to 13.6% was achieved under an air mass 1.5 G irradiation for silicon/organic hybrid solar cells with the c-Si thickness of only about 20 μm. This PCE is as high as the record currently reported in hybrid solar cells constructed from bulk c-Si, suggesting a design rule for efficient silicon/organic solar cells with thinner absorbers.Entities:
Keywords: charge recombination; heterojunction; hybrid solar cell; light trapping; surface nanotexturing
Year: 2015 PMID: 26047260 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b02432
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881