| Literature DB >> 31212971 |
Susana Fernández1, Alberto Boscá2,3, Jorge Pedrós4,5, Andrea Inés6, Montserrat Fernández7, Israel Arnedo8,9, José Pablo González10, Marina de la Cruz11, David Sanz12, Antonio Molinero13, Rajveer Singh Fandan14,15, María Ángela Pampillón16,17, Fernando Calle18,19, José Javier Gandía20, Julio Cárabe21, Javier Martínez22,23.
Abstract
New architectures of transparent conductive electrodes (TCEs) incorporating graphene monolayers in different configurations have been explored with the aim to improve the performance of silicon-heterojunction (SHJ) cell front transparent contacts. In SHJ technology, front electrodes play an important additional role as anti-reflectance (AR) coatings. In this work, different transparent-conductive-oxide (TCO) thin films have been combined with graphene monolayers in different configurations, yielding advanced transparent electrodes specifically designed to minimize surface reflection over a wide range of wavelengths and angles of incidence and to improve electrical performance. A preliminary analysis reveals a strong dependence of the optoelectronic properties of the TCEs on (i) the order in which the different thin films are deposited or the graphene is transferred and (ii) the specific TCO material used. The results shows a clear electrical improvement when three graphene monolayers are placed on top on 80-nm-thick ITO thin film. This optimum TCE presents sheet resistances as low as 55 Ω/sq and an average conductance as high as 13.12 mS. In addition, the spectral reflectance of this TCE also shows an important reduction in its weighted reflectance value of 2-3%. Hence, the work undergone so far clearly suggests the possibility to noticeably improve transparent electrodes with this approach and therefore to further enhance silicon-heterojunction cell performance. These results achieved so far clearly open the possibility to noticeably improve TCEs and therefore to further enhance SHJ contact-technology performance.Entities:
Keywords: graphene; silicon heterojunction solar devices; transparent electrodes
Year: 2019 PMID: 31212971 PMCID: PMC6631650 DOI: 10.3390/mi10060402
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Micromachines (Basel) ISSN: 2072-666X Impact factor: 2.891
Figure 1TCE configurations under study (a) configuration 1, and (b) configuration 2.
Figure 2Schematic of the transmission line model (TLM) structure used to measure the electrical parameters of the fabricated TCEs.
Theoretical and measured sheet resistances of the TCEs as function of the number of GML and the configuration used.
| Number of GML | Theoretical | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 92 | 106 ± 5 | 2830 ± 30 |
| 2 | 79 | 127 ± 6 | 790 ± 80 |
| 3 | 60 | 116 ± 6 | 450 ± 50 |
Theoretical and measured sheet resistances of the TCEs that incorporated a stack of three GML and ITO.
| Number of GML | Theoretical | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | 50 | 55 ± 5 | 156.5 ± 15 |
Figure 3(a) Total (hemispherical) reflectance spectra in the visible range (300–875 nm) of a system of two GML stacked on top of a 80-nm-thick AZO film on silicon (fill circle symbol), a 80-nm-thick AZO film on silicon (open circle symbol), two GML on silicon (dot line), and the bare silicon wafer (straight line); (b) Normalized transmittance spectra in the visible range (400–800 nm) of a system of three GML stacked on top of a 80-nm-thick ITO film on a glass substrate (straight line) and a 80-nm-thick ITO film on glass (dot line) and 3 GML on glass (triangle symbol).
Figure 4White-light optical-transmission maps of (a) 2 GML/glass; (b) 3 GML/glass; (c) TCE in configuration 2 (40-nm-thick AZO on 3 GML/glass, where the black zone corresponds to Ti/Ag metallization).
Measured white-light transmission as function of both the number of GML and the TCE configuration used.
| Number of GML | White-light T (%) | White-light T (%) | White-light T (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 86.0 | 95.0 | - |
| 1 | 84.4 | - | 97 |
| 2 | 81.7 | 92.2 | 95 |
| 3 | 80.9 | 89.4 | 93 |
Figure 5Raman spectra of a series of up to 3 GML stacked on top of the ITO/Si substrate system. The number of overlapping graphene layers (n) is indicated in each case. Spectra are vertically shifted for clarity.
Figure 6Conductance and resistance maps of 3 GML stacked transferred on top of the ITO/Si substrate system.