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Efficiency record for black silicon solar cells jumps

By R&D Editors | May 18, 2015

The surface area of the best cells in the study was already 9 cm2. This is a good starting point for upscaling the results to full wafers and all the way to the industrial scale. Image: Aalto Univ.The researchers from Finland’s Aalto Univ. and Univ. Politècnica de Catalunya have obtained the record-breaking efficiency of 22.1% on nanostructured silicon solar cells as certified by Fraunhofer ISE CalLab. An almost 4% absolute increase to their previous record is achieved by applying a thin passivating film on the nanostructures by Atomic Layer Deposition, and by integrating all metal contacts on the back side of the cell.

The surface recombination has long been the bottleneck of black silicon solar cells and has so far limited the cell efficiencies to only modest values. The new record cells consists of a thick back-contacted structure that is known to be highly sensitive to the front surface recombination. The certified external quantum efficiency of 96% at 300-nm wavelength demonstrates that the increased surface recombination problem no longer exists and for the first time the black silicon is not limiting the final energy conversion efficiency.

The results were published online in Nature Nanotechnology.

For Nordic conditions
The energy conversion efficiency is not the only parameter that we should look at, explains Prof. Hele Savin from Aalto Univ., who coordinated the study. Due to the ability of black cells to capture solar radiation from low angles, they generate more electricity already over the duration of one day as compared to the traditional cells.

“This is an advantage particularly in the north, where the sun shines from a low angle for a large part of the year. We have demonstrated that in winter Helsinki, black cells generate considerably more electricity than traditional cells even though both cells have identical efficiency values,” she adds.

In the near future, the goal of the team is to apply the technology to other cell structures—in particular, thin and multi-crystalline cells.

“Our record cells were fabricated using p-type silicon, which is known to suffer from impurity-related degradation. There is no reason why even higher efficiencies could not be reached using n-type silicon or more advanced cell structures,” Savin predicts.

The development of the cells fabricated last year will continue in the upcoming “BLACK” project, supported by the European Union, in which Prof. Savin together with her team will develop the technology further in cooperation with industry.

The surface area of the best cells in the study was already 9 cm2. This is a good starting point for upscaling the results to full wafers and all the way to the industrial scale.

Source: Aalto Univ.

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