Abstract
Carefully tailored periodic nanostructures on the light wavelength scale, such as diffraction gratings, benefit from wave optics for efficiently trapping the weakly absorbing infrared photons in crystalline-silicon (c-Si) absorbers. In contrast with the conventional random pyramid texture, diffraction gratings can be designed to target specific wavelength ranges by the selection of the grating pitch. Absorption enhancement at infrared wavelengths in a silicon solar cell is especially desired when it operates below a perovskite top cell in a tandem device. In this article, inverse nanopyramid gratings of 800 nm pitch are proposed as an alternative front-surface texture to random pyramids in silicon heterojunction devices with interdigitated back contacts that are to be used as bottom cells in four-terminal perovskite/c-Si tandem devices. By doing so, we report a short-circuit current density gain of 0.53 mA/cm2 with respect to the random pyramid texturing for the bottom c-Si cell. The rationale to substitute random pyramids by inverse nanopyramid gratings is, however, not justified in single-junction operation despite achieving the power conversion efficiency of 22.3% since the degraded optical performance at shorter wavelengths offsets the absorption enhancement at longer wavelengths, resulting in similar levels of short-circuit current densities for both texture types.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 9006891 |
| Pages (from-to) | 740-748 |
| Number of pages | 9 |
| Journal | IEEE Journal of Photovoltaics |
| Volume | 10 |
| Issue number | 3 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - May 2020 |
Keywords
- Heterojunction
- interdigitated and back contact (IBC)
- light trapping
- nanoimprint lithography (NIL)
- nanophotonics
- solar cells
- tandem cells
Funding Agency
- Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Sciences