Advanced Silicon Solar Cell Device Physics and Design
Author: Deceglie, Michael Gardner
Year: 2013
Degree: Dissertation (Ph.D.)
Advisor: Atwater, Harry Albert
Committee Members: Atwater, Harry Albert; Lewis, Nathan Saul; Painter, Oskar J.; Faraon, Andrei
Option: Applied Physics
DOI: 10.7907/PV2J-1429
Abstract
A fundamental challenge in the development and deployment of solar photovoltaic technology is a reduction in cost enabling direct competition with fossil-fuel-based energy sources. A key driver in this cost reduction is optimized device efficiency, because increased energy output leverages all photovoltaic system costs, from raw materials and module manufacturing to installation and maintenance. To continue progress toward higher conversion efficiencies, solar cells are being fabricated with increasingly complex designs, including engineered nanostructures, heterojunctions, and novel contacting and passivation schemes. Such advanced designs require a comprehensive and unified understanding of the optical and electrical device physics at the microscopic scale. This thesis focuses on a microscopic understanding of solar cell optoelectronic performance and its impact on cell optimization. We consider this in three solar cell platforms: thin-film crystalline silicon, amorphous/crystalline silicon heterojunctions, and thin-film cells with nanophotonic light trapping. The work described in this thesis represents a powerful design paradigm, based on a detailed physical understanding of the mechanisms governing solar cell performance. Furthermore, we demonstrate the importance of understanding not just the individual mechanisms, but also their interactions. Such an approach to device optimization is critical for the efficiency and competitiveness of future generations of solar cells.
Files
- [Deceglie CIT thesis.pdf](/7480/10/Deceglie CIT thesis.pdf) (application/pdf)