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The objective of this thesis is to achieve a detailed understanding of the loss mechanisms in SHJ solar cells. The working principles of these cells and what affects the cell operation, e.g. the IV characteristics at the maximum power point (MPP) and the correspondingly ll factor (FF) are investigated. Dierent

The objective of this thesis is to achieve a detailed understanding of the loss mechanisms in SHJ solar cells. The working principles of these cells and what affects the cell operation, e.g. the IV characteristics at the maximum power point (MPP) and the correspondingly ll factor (FF) are investigated. Dierent loss sources are analyzed separately, and the weight of each in the total loss at the MPP are evaluated. The total series resistance is measured and then compared with the value obtained through summation over each of its components. In other words, series resistance losses due to recombination, vertical and lateral carrier transport, metalization, etc, are individually evaluated, and then by adding all these components together, the total loss is calculated. The concept of ll factor and its direct dependence on the loss mechanisms at the MPP of the device is explained, and its sensitivity to nearly every processing step of the cell fabrication is investigated. This analysis provides a focus lens to identify the main source of losses in SHJ solar cells and pave the path for further improvements in cell efficiency.

In this thesis, we provide a detailed understanding of the FF concept; we explain how it can be directly measured; how it can be calculated and what expressions can better approximate its value and under what operating conditions. The relation between FF and cell operating condition at the MPP is investigated. We separately analyzed the main FF sources of losses including recombination, sheet resistance, contact resistance and metalization. We study FF loss due to recombination and its separate components which include the Augur, radiative and SRH recombination is investigated. We study FF loss due to contact resistance and its separate components which include the contact resistance of dierent interfaces, e.g. between the intrinsic and doped a-Si layers, TCO and a-Si layers. We also study FF loss due to lateral transport and its components that including the TCO sheet resistance, the nger and the busbars resistances.
ContributorsLeilaeioun, Mohammadmehdi (Ashling) (Author) / Goodnick, Stephen (Thesis advisor) / Goryll, Michael (Thesis advisor) / Bertoni, Mariana (Committee member) / Bowden, Stuart (Committee member) / Stuckelberger, Michael (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Recent technology advancements in photovoltaics have enabled crystalline silicon (c-Si) solar cells to establish outstanding photoconversion efficiency records. Remarkable progresses in research and development have been made both on the silicon feedstock quality as well as the technology required for surface passivation, the two dominant sources of performance loss via

Recent technology advancements in photovoltaics have enabled crystalline silicon (c-Si) solar cells to establish outstanding photoconversion efficiency records. Remarkable progresses in research and development have been made both on the silicon feedstock quality as well as the technology required for surface passivation, the two dominant sources of performance loss via recombination of photo-generated charge carriers within advanced solar cell architectures.

As these two aspects of the solar cell framework improve, the need for a thorough analysis of their respective contribution under varying operation conditions has emerged along with challenges related to the lack of sensitivity of available characterization techniques. The main objective of my thesis work has been to establish a deep understanding of both “intrinsic” and “extrinsic” recombination processes that govern performance in high-quality silicon absorbers. By studying each recombination mechanism as a function of illumination and temperature, I strive to identify the lifetime limiting defects and propose a path to engineer the ultimate silicon solar cell.

This dissertation presents a detailed description of the experimental procedure required to deconvolute surface recombination contributions from bulk recombination contributions when performing lifetime spectroscopy analysis. This work proves that temperature- and injection-dependent lifetime spectroscopy (TIDLS) sensitivity can be extended to impurities concentrations down to 109 cm-3, orders of magnitude below any other characterization technique available today. A new method for the analysis of TIDLS data denominated Defect Parameters Contour Mapping (DPCM) is presented with the aim of providing a visual and intuitive tool to identify the lifetime limiting impurities in silicon material. Surface recombination velocity results are modelled by applying appropriate approaches from literature to our experimentally evaluated data, demonstrating for the first time their capability to interpret temperature-dependent data. In this way, several new results are obtained which solve long disputed aspects of surface passivation mechanisms. Finally, we experimentally evaluate the temperature-dependence of Auger lifetime and its impact on a theoretical intrinsically limited solar cell. These results decisively point to the need for a new Auger lifetime parameterization accounting for its temperature-dependence, which would in turn help understand the ultimate theoretical efficiency limit for a solar cell under real operation conditions.
ContributorsBernardini, Simone (Author) / Bertoni, Mariana I (Thesis advisor) / Coletti, Gianluca (Committee member) / Bowden, Stuart (Committee member) / Alford, Terry (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
In order to meet climate targets, the solar photovoltaic industry must increase photovoltaic (PV) deployment and cost competitiveness over its business-as-usual trajectory. This requires more efficient PV modules that use less expensive materials, and longer operational lifetime. The work presented here approaches this challenge with a novel metallization method for

In order to meet climate targets, the solar photovoltaic industry must increase photovoltaic (PV) deployment and cost competitiveness over its business-as-usual trajectory. This requires more efficient PV modules that use less expensive materials, and longer operational lifetime. The work presented here approaches this challenge with a novel metallization method for solar PV and electronic devices.

This document outlines work completed to this end. Chapter 1 introduces the areas for cost reductions and improvements in efficiency to drive down the cost per watt of solar modules. Next, in Chapter 2, conventional and advanced metallization methods are reviewed, and our proposed solution of dispense printed reactive inks is introduced. Chapter 3 details a proof of concept study for reactive silver ink as front metallization for solar cells. Furthermore, Chapter 3 details characterization of the optical and electrical properties of reactive silver ink metallization, which is important to understanding the origins of problems related to metallization, enabling approaches to minimize power losses in full devices. Chapter 4 describes adhesion and specific contact resistance of reactive ink metallizations on silicon heterojunction solar cells. Chapter 5 compares performance of silicon heterojunction solar cells with front grids formed from reactive ink metallization and conventional, commercially available metallization. Performance and degradation throughout 1000 h of accelerated environmental exposure are described before detailing an isolated corrosion experiment for different silver-based metallizations. Finally, Chapter 6 summarizes the main contributions of this work.

The major goal of this project is to evaluate potential of a new metallization technique –high-precision dispense printing of reactive inks–to become a high efficiency replacement for solar cell metallization through optical and electrical characterization, evaluation of durability and reliability, and commercialization research. Although this work primarily describes the application of reactive silver inks as front-metallization for silicon heterojunction solar cells, the work presented here provides a framework for evaluation of reactive inks as metallization for various solar cell architectures and electronic devices.
ContributorsJeffries, April M (Author) / Bertoni, Mariana I (Thesis advisor) / Saive, Rebecca (Committee member) / Holman, Zachary (Committee member) / Alford, Terry (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
Description
This is a lectures series on photovoltaics. As the need for electrical energy rises, mankind has struggled to meet its need in a reliable lasting way. Throughout this struggle, solar energy has come to the foreground as a complete solution. However, it has many drawbacks and needs a lot of

This is a lectures series on photovoltaics. As the need for electrical energy rises, mankind has struggled to meet its need in a reliable lasting way. Throughout this struggle, solar energy has come to the foreground as a complete solution. However, it has many drawbacks and needs a lot of development. In addition, the general public is unaware of how solar energy works, how it is made, and how it stands economically. This series of lectures answering those three questions. After two years doing photovoltaic research, and an undergraduate degree in Electrical Engineering, enough expertise has been acquired present on at a late high-school to early college level. Education is key to improving the popularity of using solar energy and the popularity of investing in photovoltaic research. Solar energy is a viable option to satisfy our energy crisis because the materials it requires can quickly be acquired, and there is enough of material to provide a global solution. In addition, the amount of solar energy that hits the surface of the earth in a day is orders of magnitude more than the amount of energy we require. The main goal of this project is to have an effective accessible tool to teach people about solar. Thus, the lectured will be posted on pveducation.com, YouTube, the Barrett repository, and the QUSST website. The content was acquired in four ways. The first way is reading up on the current papers and journals describing the new developments in photovoltaics. The second part is getting in contact with Stuart Bowden and Bill Daukser at Arizona State University's Solar Power Lab as well as the other faculty associated with the Solar Power Lab. There is quite a bit of novel research going on at their lab, as well as a student run pilot line that is actively building solar cells. The third way is reading about solar device physics using device physics textbooks and the PVEducation website made by Stuart Bowden. The forth way is going into ASU's solar power lab.
ContributorsLeBeau, Edward (Author) / Goryll, Michael (Thesis director) / Bowden, Stuart (Committee member) / Dauksher, William (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2017-05
Description
This is a lectures series on photovoltaics. As the need for electrical energy rises, mankind has struggled to meet its need in a reliable lasting way. Throughout this struggle, solar energy has come to the foreground as a complete solution. However, it has many drawbacks and needs a lot of

This is a lectures series on photovoltaics. As the need for electrical energy rises, mankind has struggled to meet its need in a reliable lasting way. Throughout this struggle, solar energy has come to the foreground as a complete solution. However, it has many drawbacks and needs a lot of development. In addition, the general public is unaware of how solar energy works, how it is made, and how it stands economically. This series of lectures answering those three questions.
ContributorsLeBeau, Edward Sanroma (Author) / Goryll, Michael (Thesis director) / Bowden, Stuart (Committee member) / Dauksher, Bill (Committee member) / Electrical Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2017-05
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Description
Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are a new set of porous materials comprised of metals or metal clusters bonded together in a coordination system by organic linkers. They are becoming popular for gas separations due to their abilities to be tailored toward specific applications. Zirconium MOFs in particular are known for their

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are a new set of porous materials comprised of metals or metal clusters bonded together in a coordination system by organic linkers. They are becoming popular for gas separations due to their abilities to be tailored toward specific applications. Zirconium MOFs in particular are known for their high stability under standard temperature and pressure due to the strength of the Zirconium-Oxygen coordination bond. However, the acid modulator needed to ensure long range order of the product also prevents complete linker deprotonation. This leads to a powder product that cannot easily be incorporated into continuous MOF membranes. This study therefore implemented a new bi-phase synthesis technique with a deprotonating agent to achieve intergrowth in UiO-66 membranes. Crystal intergrowth will allow for effective gas separations and future permeation testing. During experimentation, successful intergrown UiO-66 membranes were synthesized and characterized. The degree of intergrowth and crystal orientations varied with changing deprotonating agent concentration, modulator concentration, and ligand:modulator ratios. Further studies will focus on achieving the same results on porous substrates.
ContributorsClose, Emily Charlotte (Author) / Mu, Bin (Thesis director) / Shan, Bohan (Committee member) / Chemical Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-12
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Description
Metallization of solar cells is a critical process step in the manufacturing of silicon photovoltaics (PV) as it plays a large role in device performance and production cost. Improvements in device performance linked to metallization and reduction in material usage and processing costs will continue to drive next-generation silicon PV

Metallization of solar cells is a critical process step in the manufacturing of silicon photovoltaics (PV) as it plays a large role in device performance and production cost. Improvements in device performance linked to metallization and reduction in material usage and processing costs will continue to drive next-generation silicon PV technology. Chapter 1 introduces the context for the contributions of this thesis by providing background information on silicon PV cell technology, solar cell device physics and characterization, and metallization performance for common silicon cell structures. Chapter 2 presents a thermal model that links sub-bandgap reflectance, an important metric at the rear metal interface, to outdoor module operating temperature. Chapter 3 implements this model experimentally with aluminum back-surface field (Al-BSF), passivated emitter and rear contact (PERC), and passivated emitter rear totally diffused (PERT) mini-modules, where the PERT cells were modified to include an optimized sub-bandgap reflector stack. The dedicated optical layer was a porous low-refractive index silica nanoparticle film and was deposited between the dielectric passivation and full area metallization. This created an appreciable boost in sub-bandgap reflectance over the PERC and Al-BSF cells, which directly lead to cooler operating temperature of the fielded module. Chapter 4 investigates low-temperature Ag metallization approaches to SiO2/polysilicon passivating contacts (TOPCon architecture). The low-temperature Ag sintering process does not damage TOPCon passivation for structures with 40-nm-thick poly-Si but shows higher contact resistivity than sputtered references. This disparity is investigated and the impact of Ag diffusion processes, microstructure changes, ambient gases, and interfacial chemical reactions are evaluated. Chapter 5 investigates sputtered Al metallization to silicon heterojunction contacts of both polarities. This In-free and Ag-free metallization process can achieve low contact resistivity and no passivation loss when annealed between 150-180 °C. The passivation degradation at higher temperatures was studied with high-resolution microscopy and elemental mapping, where the interdiffusion processes were identified. Lastly, Chapter 6 summarizes the contribution of this work.
ContributorsBryan, Jonathan Linden (Author) / Holman, Zachary C (Thesis advisor) / Bertoni, Mariana I (Committee member) / Bowden, Stuart G (Committee member) / Goryll, Michael (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
In-field characterization of photovoltaics is crucial to understanding performance and degradation mechanisms, subsequently improving overall reliability and lifespans. Current outdoor characterization is often limited by logistical difficulties, variable weather, and requirements to measure during peak production hours. It becomes a challenge to find a characterization technique that is affordable with

In-field characterization of photovoltaics is crucial to understanding performance and degradation mechanisms, subsequently improving overall reliability and lifespans. Current outdoor characterization is often limited by logistical difficulties, variable weather, and requirements to measure during peak production hours. It becomes a challenge to find a characterization technique that is affordable with a low impact on system performance while still providing useful device parameters. For added complexity, this characterization technique must have the ability to scale for implementation in large powerplant applications. This dissertation addresses some of the challenges of outdoor characterization by expanding the knowledge of a well-known indoor technique referred to as Suns-VOC. Suns-VOC provides a pseudo current-voltage curve that is free of any effects from series resistance. Device parameters can be extracted from this pseudo I-V curve, allowing for subsequent degradation analysis. This work introduces how to use Suns-VOC outdoors while normalizing results based on the different effects of environmental conditions. This technique is validated on single-cells, modules, and small arrays with accuracies capable of measuring yearly degradation. An adaptation to Suns-VOC, referred to as Suns-Voltage-Resistor (Suns-VR), is also introduced to complement the results from Suns-VOC. This work can potentially be used to provide a diagnostic tool for outdoor characterization in various applications, including residential, commercial, and industrial PV systems.
ContributorsKillam, Alexander Cameron (Author) / Bowden, Stuart G (Thesis advisor) / Goryll, Michael (Committee member) / Augusto, Andre (Committee member) / Rand, James (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
ABSTRACT



Large-pore metal-organic framework (MOF) membranes offer potential in a number of gas and liquid separations due to their wide and selective adsorption capacities. A key characteristic of a number of MOF and zeolitic imidazolate framework (ZIF) membranes is their highly selective adsorption capacities for CO2.

ABSTRACT



Large-pore metal-organic framework (MOF) membranes offer potential in a number of gas and liquid separations due to their wide and selective adsorption capacities. A key characteristic of a number of MOF and zeolitic imidazolate framework (ZIF) membranes is their highly selective adsorption capacities for CO2. These membranes offer very tangible potential to separate CO2 in a wide array of industrially relevant separation processes, such as the separation from CO2 in flue gas emissions, as well as the sweetening of methane.

By virtue of this, the purpose of this dissertation is to synthesize and characterize two linear large-pore MOF membranes, MOF-5 and ZIF-68, and to study their gas separation properties in binary mixtures of CO¬2/N2 and CO2/CH4. The three main objectives researched are as follows. The first is to study the pervaporation behavior and stability of MOF-5; this is imperative because although MOF-5 exhibits desirable adsorption and separation characteristics, it is very unstable in atmospheric conditions. In determining its stability and behavior in pervaporation, this material can be utilized in conditions wherein atmospheric levels of moisture can be avoided. The second objective is to synthesize, optimize and characterize a linear, more stable MOF membrane, ZIF-68. The final objective is to study in tandem the high-pressure gas separation behavior of MOF-5 and ZIF-68 in binary gas systems of both CO2/N2 and CO2/CH4.

Continuous ZIF-68 membranes were synthesized via the reactive seeding method and the modified reactive seeding method. These membranes, as with the MOF-5 membranes synthesized herein, both showed adherence to Knudsen diffusion, indicating limited defects. Organic solvent experiments indicated that MOF-5 and ZIF-68 were stable in a variety of organic solvents, but both showed reductions in permeation flux of the tested molecules. These reductions were attributed to fouling and found to be cumulative up until a saturation of available bonding sites for molecules was reached and stable pervaporation permeances were reached for both. Gas separation behavior for MOF-5 showed direct dependence on the CO2 partial pressure and the overall feed pressure, while ZIF-68 did not show similar behavior. Differences in separation behavior are attributable to orientation of the ZIF-68 membranes.
ContributorsKasik, Alexandra Marie (Author) / Lin, Jerry (Thesis advisor) / Tasooji, Amaneh (Committee member) / Alford, Terry (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
The emergence of perovskite and practical efficiency limit to silicon solar cells has opened door for perovskite and silicon based tandems with the possibility to achieve >30% efficiency. However, there are material and optical challenges that have to be overcome for the success of these tandems. In this work the

The emergence of perovskite and practical efficiency limit to silicon solar cells has opened door for perovskite and silicon based tandems with the possibility to achieve >30% efficiency. However, there are material and optical challenges that have to be overcome for the success of these tandems. In this work the aim is to understand and improve the light management issues in silicon and perovskite based tandems through comprehensive optical modeling and simulation of current state of the art tandems and by characterizing the optical properties of new top and bottom cell materials. Moreover, to propose practical solutions to mitigate some of the optical losses.

Highest efficiency single-junction silicon and bottom silicon sub-cell in silicon based tandems employ monocrystalline silicon wafer textured with random pyramids. Therefore, the light trapping performance of random pyramids in silicon solar cells is established. An accurate three-dimensional height map of random pyramids is captured and ray-traced to record the angular distribution of light inside the wafer which shows random pyramids trap light as well as Lambertian scatterer.

Second, the problem of front-surface reflectance common to all modules, planar solar cells and to silicon and perovskite based tandems is dealt. A nano-imprint lithography procedure is developed to fabricate polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) scattering layer carrying random pyramids that effectively reduces the reflectance. Results show it increased the efficiency of planar semi-transparent perovskite solar cell by 10.6% relative.

Next a detailed assessment of light-management in practical two-terminal perovskite/silicon and perovskite/perovskite tandems is performed to quantify reflectance, parasitic and light-trapping losses. For this first a methodology based on spectroscopic ellipsometry is developed to characterize new absorber materials employed in tandems. Characterized materials include wide-bandgap (CH3NH3I3, CsyFA1-yPb(BrxI1-x)3) and low-bandgap (Cs0.05FA0.5MA0.45(Pb0.5Sn0.5)I3) perovskites and wide-bandgap CdTe alloys (CdZnSeTe). Using this information rigorous optical modeling of two-terminal perovskite/silicon and perovskite/perovskite tandems with varying light management schemes is performed. Thus providing a guideline for further development.
ContributorsManzoor, Salman (Author) / Holman, Zachary C (Thesis advisor) / King, Richard (Committee member) / Goryll, Michael (Committee member) / Zhao, Yuji (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019