The activation of CdTe with a cadmium chloride
annealing treatment is a vital step in the fabrication of high
efficiency solar cells. Thin film MZO/CdTe cells have been
activated using CdBr2 instead of CdCl2 with a lower activation
process temperature. Using this method, CdBr2 does activate the
cell as revealed by J-V and EQE measurements. TEM and EDX
elemental maps from device cross-sections confirm that bromine
is present in the grain boundaries. TEM shows that the
treatment removes stacking faults at 425 °C. CdBr2 treatment
resulted in a relatively modest conversion efficiency of 5.49%
when treated at 375 °C. Nevertheless, the experiments shed
further light on the mechanisms involved in the activation.
Funding
The Loughborough University authors are grateful to
UKERC for financial assistance through the EPSRC
Supergen SuperSolar Hub and a studentship with the CDT in
New and Sustainable Photovoltaics
History
School
Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
Published in
2018 IEEE 7th World Conference on Photovoltaic Energy Conversion (WCPEC) (A Joint Conference of 45th IEEE PVSC, 28th PVSEC & 34th EU PVSEC)
2018 IEEE 7th World Conference on Photovoltaic Energy Conversion (WCPEC) (A Joint Conference of 45th IEEE PVSC, 28th PVSEC & 34th EU PVSEC)
Citation
GREENHALGH, R.C. .... et al., 2018. Activation of thin film CdTe solar cells using a cadmium bromide treatment. Presented at the 2018 IEEE 7th World Conference on Photovoltaic Energy Conversion (WCPEC) (A Joint Conference of 45th IEEE PVSC, 28th PVSEC & 34th EU PVSEC), Waikoloa Village, HI, USA, 10-15 June, pp. 2990 - 2993.
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