| Literature DB >> 31044022 |
Thomas Paul Weiss1,2, Romain Carron1, Max H Wolter2, Johannes Löckinger1, Enrico Avancini1, Susanne Siebentritt2, Stephan Buecheler1, Ayodhya N Tiwari1.
Abstract
Time-resolved photoluminescence (TRPL) is applied to determine an effective lifetime of minority charge carriers in semiconductors. Such effective lifetimes include recombination channels in the bulk as well as at the surfaces and interfaces of the device. In the case of Cu(In,Ga)Se2 absorbers used for solar cell applications, trapping of minority carriers has also been reported to impact the effective minority carrier lifetime. Trapping can be indicated by an increased temperature dependence of the experimentally determined photoluminescence decay time when compared to the temperature dependence of Shockley-Read-Hall (SRH) recombination alone and can lead to an overestimation of the minority carrier lifetime. Here, it is shown by technology computer-aided design (TCAD) simulations and by experiment that the intentional double-graded bandgap profile of high efficiency Cu(In,Ga)Se2 absorbers causes a temperature dependence of the PL decay time similar to trapping in case of a recombinative front surface. It is demonstrated that a passivated front surface results in a temperature dependence of the decay time that can be explained without minority carrier trapping and thus enables the assessment of the absorber quality by means of the minority carrier lifetime. Comparison with the absolute PL yield and the quasi-Fermi-level splitting (QFLS) corroborate the conclusion that the measured decay time corresponds to the bulk minority carrier lifetime of 250 ns for the double-graded CIGS absorber under investigation.Entities:
Keywords: 209 Solar cell / Photovoltaics; 50 Energy Materials; 505 Optical / Molecular spectroscopy; Cu(InGa)Se2; Time-resolved photoluminescence; bandgap grading; minority carrier lifetime; trapping
Year: 2019 PMID: 31044022 PMCID: PMC6484473 DOI: 10.1080/14686996.2019.1586583
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Technol Adv Mater ISSN: 1468-6996 Impact factor: 8.090
Figure 1.Modeling of the conduction band edge for a double graded CIGS absorber. While the CIGSnotch and the CIGSback region were kept constant, the GGI increase toward the front surface was varied. The valence band was constant throughout the CIGS absorber. The energy corresponds to the Fermi level.
Figure 2.Calculated radiative recombination constants with respect to the CGI and the GGI of a CIGS material (a). In (b) the temperature dependence of the radiative recombination constant is shown for a fixed GGI of 0.16.
Figure 3.Impact of the increase of the toward the front (see Figure 1) and the front surface recombination velocity on the lifetime of the decay curve. The mobility was set to 30 and to 200 ns.
Figure 4.Temperature dependence of extracted lifetimes for various surface recombination velocities and carrier mobilities of (a), (b), and (c). The toward the front contact was set to 0.2 for all simulations and no SRH temperature dependence has been included. No temperature dependence of the SRH recombination has been taken into account. For higher temperatures, an increased emission of electrons over the conduction band barrier toward the front surface results in increased (front) surface recombination.
Figure 5.Temperature dependence of the simulated PL decay time without (colored solid lines, full symbols) and with (colored dashed lines, open symbols) a temperature dependence of the radiative recombination constant. The bulk lifetime was set to and . Solid black curves are fits to equation (2) and the parameter describing the temperature dependence is indicated.
Figure 6.Experimental PL transients with respect to temperature. Single exponential functions were fitted between 5 and 100 ns (solid black lines) to extract the lifetime. The residuals of the fit for the lowest and highest temperature are plotted on the right ordinate indicating a single exponential behavior in this time range.
Figure 7.Extracted lifetimes from the transients with respect to temperature of the 14ʹ CdS sample (a), the HCl etch sample (b) and the KCN etched with a 19ʹ CdS layer (c).