Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9829616 | Journal of Crystal Growth | 2005 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Using single crystalline Si wafer substrates, ion-assisted deposition (IAD) has recently been shown [J. Crystal Growth 268 (2004) 41] to be capable of high-quality high-rate epitaxial Si growth in a non-ultra-high vacuum (non-UHV) environment at low temperatures of about 600 °C. In the present work the non-UHV IAD method is applied to planar borosilicate glass substrates featuring a polycrystalline silicon seed layer and carefully optimised. Using thin-film solar cells as test vehicle, the best trade-off between various contamination-related processes (seed layer surface as well as bulk contamination) is determined. In the optimised IAD process, the temperature of the glass substrate remains below 600 °C. The as-grown Si material is found to respond well to post-growth treatments (rapid thermal annealing, hydrogenation), enabling respectable open-circuit voltages of up to 420 mV under 1-Sun illumination. This proves that the non-UHV IAD method is capable of achieving device-grade polycrystalline silicon material on seeded borosilicate glass substrates.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Condensed Matter Physics
Authors
Axel Straub, Daniel Inns, Mason L. Terry, Yidan Huang, Per I. Widenborg, Armin G. Aberle,