Electronic Passivation of Crystalline Silicon Surfaces Using Spatial‐Atomic‐Layer‐Deposited HfO2 Films and HfO2/SiNx Stacks

authored by
Jan Schmidt, Michael Winter, Floor Souren, Jons Bolding, Hindrik de Vries
Abstract

Spatial Atomic Layer Deposition (SALD) is applied to the electronic passivation of moderately doped (~10^16 cm^–3) p-type crystalline silicon surfaces by thin layers of hafnium oxide (HfO2). For 10 nm thick HfO2 layers annealed at 400°C, an effective surface recombination velocity Seff of 4 cm/s is achieved, which is below what has been reported before on moderately doped p-type silicon. The one-sun implied open-circuit voltage amounts to iVoc = 727 mV. After firing at 700°C peak temperature in a conveyor belt furnace, as applied in the production of solar cells, still a good level of surface passivation with an Seff of 21 cm/s is attained. Reducing the HfO2 thickness to 1 nm, the passivation virtually vanishes after firing (i.e., Seff > 1000 cm/s). However, by adding a capping layer of plasma-enhanced-chemical-vapor-deposited hydrogen-rich silicon nitride (SiNx) onto the 1 nm HfO2, a substantially improved firing stability is attained, as demonstrated by Seff values as low as 30 cm/s after firing, which is attributed to the hydrogenation of interface states. The presented study demonstrates that SALD-deposited HfO2 layers and HfO2/SiNx stacks have the potential to evolve into an attractive surface passivation scheme for future solar cells.

Organisation(s)
Institute of Solid State Physics
Solar Energy Section
External Organisation(s)
Institute for Solar Energy Research (ISFH)
Type
Article
Journal
physica status solidi (RRL) – Rapid Research Letters
Volume
2024
ISSN
1862-6254
Publication date
07.10.2024
Publication status
E-pub ahead of print
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Condensed Matter Physics, Materials Science(all)
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1002/pssr.202400255 (Access: Open)