SiliconPV Conference Proceedings (Feb 2025)
Reduction of Scarce Materials in Silicon Heterojunction Solar Cells and Implications on the Performance in the Field
Abstract
In the first part of this work the potential to save silver for n-type silicon heterojunction solar cells was investigated. Cells were produced with varied frontside screen opening (30-50 µm). The groups were compared for efficiency at different irradiation levels and frontside silver laydown. For five busbar configuration large opening with low series resistance led to the highest efficiency for high irradiation around 1000 W/m² while for low irradiations all cells performed similarly. For busbarless cells lower silver laydown led to similar efficiency with slight advances for narrow screen opening. In summary cell technologies with small busbar-pitch are more tolerant for low-silver metallization. In the second part the impact of the transparent conductive oxide (TCO) was addressed. Silicon Heterojunction cells were produced with either ITO (indium tin oxide) only or an ITO-AZO-ITO (aluminium doped zinc oxide) stack, enabling an ITO reduction of about 50%, leading to a tolerable efficiency-drop of 0.3%. These internal samples were compared to industrial heterojunction-precursors (post ITO) with reference and low silver consumption frontside metallization. For both parts IV measurement showed that series resistance has a strong impact on efficiency but a rather small impact on low light-efficiency. Considering low light conditions TCO-precursor type with differences in passivation have a strong impact. On module level similar irradiation dependence of the efficiency was found and in temperature-dependent IV-measurements a positive impact of high-quality passivation on the temperature coefficients was found while an increase of the series resistance had a negative impact on the temperature dependence.
Keywords