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Amorphous/Microcrystalline Phase Control in Silicon Film Deposition for Improved Solar Cell Performance
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 August 2011
Abstract
Real time optical studies have provided insights into the growth of hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) and microcrystalline silicon (μc-Si:H) thin films by plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition as a function of the H2-dilution gas flow ratio Research-article=[H2]/[SiH4], the accumulated film thickness db, and the substrate material. Results pertinent to the optimization of a-Si:H-based solar cells have been obtained in studies of Si film growth at moderate to high R on dense amorphous semiconductor film surfaces. For depositions with 15≤Research-article≤80 on freshly-deposited a-Si:H, initial film growth occurs in the amorphous phase. Upon continued growth, however, a transition is observed as crystallites begin to nucleate from the amorphous film. The thickness at which this amorphous-to-microcrystalline (a→μc) transition occurs is found to decrease with increasing R.Based on these results, a deposition phase diagram has been proposed that describes the a–gc transition as a continuous function of R and db. We find that the optimum stabilized a-Si:H p-i-n solar cell performance is obtained in an i-layer growth process that is maintained as close as possible to the phase boundary (but on the amorphous side) versus film thickness.
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- Copyright © Materials Research Society 1999
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