Abstract
Hydrogenation is a crucial step in the fabrication of high-efficiency silicon solar cells. In this study, the effectiveness of hydrogen activation is demonstrated via microwave annealing of hydrogen-rich dielectrics coated on poly-Si passivating contacts. This method is compared with conventional hydrogenation techniques, such as annealing in N2 in the presence of a hydrogen-rich source (such as hydrogenated aluminum oxide (AlOx:H), hydrogenated silicon nitride (SiNy:H), or a AlOx:H/SiNy:H stack). Key improvements observed include a reduction in J0 from 30 to <5 fA cm-2, an increase in iVoc from 690 to >730 mV, and an enhancement in effective lifetime (teff) from 0.6 to ~3.5 milliseconds on phosphorus-doped poly-Si/SiO2 passivating contact samples. With a very short annealing time of ~1-2 min, the samples passivated by AlOx:H, SiNy:H, or the stack show similar performance to samples subjected to 30 min of nitrogen annealing. Photoluminescence (PL) spectra corroborate the findings regarding the hydrogenation of the poly-Si layer and the c-Si substrate, with an increase in PL intensity after microwave annealing. Ultimately, this work suggests that microwave annealing could be a promising addition, offering flexibility to traditional firing hydrogenation processes.
| Original language | American English |
|---|---|
| Journal | Advanced Energy and Sustainability Research |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 2025 |
NLR Publication Number
- NREL/JA-5900-91033
Keywords
- hydrogenation
- microwave annealing
- passivating contacts
- poly-Si