Light-trapping structures fabricated in situ for ultrathin III-V solar cells

Here, we describe a fully in situ method of fabricating light-scattering structures on III-V materials that generates a rough morphology via vapor phase etching and redeposition. Fully in situ methods support higher industrial throughput by utilizing the growth reactor to generate the light-trapping...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of applied physics 2023-10, Vol.134 (13)
Hauptverfasser: Perna, Allison N., Schulte, Kevin L., Simon, John, Braun, Anna K., Diercks, David R., Packard, Corinne E., Ptak, Aaron J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Here, we describe a fully in situ method of fabricating light-scattering structures on III-V materials that generates a rough morphology via vapor phase etching and redeposition. Fully in situ methods support higher industrial throughput by utilizing the growth reactor to generate the light-trapping structures after device growth without removal from the reactor. We use HCl and PH3 to etch and redeposit scattering morphologies on Ga0.5In0.5P in a dynamic hydride vapor phase epitaxy (D-HVPE) reactor. We show that the addition of PH3 leads to redeposition during the vapor phase HCl etching of Ga0.5In0.5P and that HCl flow rate and time exposed to HCl-PH3 each independently cause a linear increase in the redeposited feature size, indicating that redeposition proceeds by island growth in a III-Cl-limited, hydride-enhanced HVPE regime. Auger electron spectroscopy and scanning transmission electron microscopy with energy dispersive spectroscopy (STEM-EDS) reveal redeposition to be highly Ga-rich GaInP, i.e., Ga(In)P. The Ga-rich nature of the redeposition results from the higher thermodynamic driving force for Ga incorporation than for In during HVPE growth and the difference in the volatility of the III-Cl etch products. The resulting morphologies have high broadband scattering, as determined by normal specular reflectance and integrating sphere measurements, indicating effectiveness as light-scattering structures. In a 270-nm-thick GaAs photovoltaic device with a textured back surface, we achieve a 4.9% increase in short circuit current density (JSC) without any loss in open-circuit voltage (VOC) relative to a planar control using only a 60 s in situ texturing treatment.
ISSN:0021-8979
1089-7550
DOI:10.1063/5.0160559