Plasma nanotexturing of silicon surfaces for photovoltaics applications: Influence of initial surface finish on the evolution of topographical and optical properties

Guillaume Fischer, Etienne Drahi, Martin Foldyna, Thomas A. Germer, Erik V. Johnson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Using a plasma to generate a surface texture with feature sizes on the order of tens to hundreds of nanometers (“nanotexturing”) is a promising technique being considered to improve efficiency in thin, high-efficiency crystalline silicon solar cells. This study investigates the evolution of the optical properties of silicon samples with various initial surface finishes (from mirror polish to various states of micron-scale roughness) during a plasma nanotexturing process. It is shown that during said process, the appearance and growth of nanocone-like structures are essentially independent of the initial surface finish, as quantified by the auto-correlation function of the surface morphology. During the first stage of the process (2 min to 15 min etching), the reflectance and light-trapping abilities of the nanotextured surfaces are strongly influenced by the initial surface roughness; however, the differences tend to diminish as the nanostructures become larger. For the longest etching times (15 min or more), the effective reflectance is less than 5% and a strong anisotropic scattering behavior is also observed for all samples, leading to very elevated levels of light-trapping.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)A1057-A1071
JournalOptics Express
Volume25
Issue number24
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27 Nov 2017
Externally publishedYes

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