Lecture 6-10
Lecture 6-10
➢Joining n-type material with p-type material causes excess electrons in the n-type
material to diffuse to the p-type side and excess holes from the p-type material to
diffuse to the n-type side.
➢Resulting a charge separation which can flown to external circuit and hence
convert light energy to electric energy
Formation of a PN-Junction
➢Joining n-type material with p-type material causes excess electrons in the n-type
material to diffuse to the p-type side and excess holes from the p-type material to
diffuse to the n-type side.
➢Movement of electrons to the p-type side exposes positive ion cores in the n-type
side while movement of holes to the n-type side exposes negative ion cores in the
p-type side, resulting in an electron field at the junction and forming the depletion
region.
➢In equilibrium, the net current (diffusion and entrainment) is zero for both
electrons and holes, because the diffusion current is equal and opposite to the
drag current for both carriers.
➢Junction diodes pn are the basis not only of solar cells, but many other electronic
devices, such as LEDs, laser diodes and bipolar junction transistors (BJTs).
Interesting things happen when you put an N-type material in
contact with a P-type material.
Before making the contact:
Ping Hsu 4
P-type boundary N-type
(Negatively charged!) layer (Positively charged!)
In the boundary layer, the free electrons in the N-type materials
combine with the holes in the P-type. Consequently, the P-type
side of the boundary layer is negatively charged and N-type side
is positively charged.
5
The
Ping Hsuboundary lay is called PN-junction or depletion region.
n-type and p-type materials brought together.
V0 depends on...????
V0 = (KT/q) ln(NAND/ni2)
E
Semiconductor devices have three modes of operation:
Under steady state there are external inputs such as light or applied voltage, but
the conditions do not change with time. Devices typically operate in steady state
and are either in forward or reverse bias.
➢3. Transient
If the applied voltage changes rapidly, there will be a short delay before the solar
cell responds. As solar cells are not used for high speed operation there are few
extra transient effects that need to be taken into account.
Bias of PN Junctions
• electron in conduction band at
N side decrease exp with high E
• holes in V band at P side decreases
exp with lower E level
• Due to concentration diff, electrons
from n side should move to p side, but
faces potential barrier as C band at p
is higher than n side.
•Only few e can diffuse to p side,
giving diffusion current of e from p-n
•E at p side are minorities but at highr
energy level, can easily drift to n side
due to E field in depletion region
•This gives electron drift current from
n-p
•Same things happens for holes of p
side diffusion and holes from n side
drift
Forward Bias PN Junctions
➢Forward bias occurs when a voltage is applied across the solar cell such that the
electric field formed by the P-N junction is decreased. It eases carrier diffusion across
the depletion region, and leads to increased diffusion current.
V0 – VA in forward bias
Both electron diff and hole diff current flow from p to n in forward biasing
Net current is known forward bias current
Reversed Bias PN Junctions
➢Reverse bias occurs when a voltage is applied across the solar cell such that
the electric field formed by the P-N junction is increased. Diffusion current
decreases.
Ideal Diodes
The diode equation gives an expression for the current through a diode as a
function of voltage. The Ideal Diode Law, expressed as:
where:
I = the net current flowing through the diode;
I0 = "dark saturation current", the diode
leakage current density in the absence of light;
V = applied voltage across the terminals of the diode;
q = absolute value of electron charge;
k = Boltzmann's constant; and
T = absolute temperature (K).
The "dark saturation current" (I0) is an extremely important parameter which
differentiates one diode from another. I0 is a measure of the recombination in a
device. A diode with a larger recombination will have a larger I0.
Note that:
I0 increases as T increases; and
I0 decreases as material quality increases.
At 300K, kT/q = 25.85 mV, the "thermal voltage".
Non-Ideal Diodes
For actual diodes, the expression becomes:
where:
n = ideality factor, a number between 1 and 2 which typically
increases as the current decreases.
PN Junction under illumination: Solar cell
PN Junction under illumination: Solar cell
net charge increase + at P and – at N build up a potential difference across P-N junction
This photo voltage due to light is photovoltaic effect
PN Junction under illumination: Solar cell
Role of diffusion length?
The -1 term in the above equation can usually be neglected. The exponential term
is usually >> 1 except for voltages below 100 mV. Further, at low voltages the light
generated current IL dominates the I0 (...) term so the -1 term is not needed under
illumination.
The short-circuit current (ISC), the open-circuit voltage (VOC), the fill factor (FF) and
the efficiency are all parameters determined from the IV curve.
Solar cell I-V curve
Solar cell I-V curve
Solar Cell Parameters
The current from the solar cell is the difference between IL and the forward bias
current. Under open circuit conditions, the forward bias of the junction increases to a
point where the light-generated current is exactly balanced by the forward bias
diffusion current, and the net current is zero. The voltage required to cause these two
currents to balance is called the "open-circuit voltage".
Short-Circuit Current
The short-circuit current is the current through the solar cell when the voltage across
the solar cell is zero (i.e., when the solar cell is short circuited). Usually written as ISC,
the short-circuit current is shown on the IV curve below.
Isc = -IL
The short-circuit current is due to the generation and collection of light-generated
carriers. For an ideal solar cell at most moderate resistive loss mechanisms, the
short-circuit current and the light-generated current are identical. Therefore, the
short-circuit current is the largest current which may be drawn from the solar cell.
The short-circuit current depends on a number of factors which are described
below:
➢the area of the solar cell. To remove the dependence of the solar cell area, it is
more common to list the short-circuit current density (Jsc in mA/cm2) rather than
the short-circuit current;
➢the number of photons (i.e., the power of the incident light source). Isc from a
solar cell is directly dependant on the light intensity;
➢the spectrum of the incident light. For most solar cell measurement, the
spectrum is standardised to the AM1.5 spectrum;
➢the optical properties (absorption and reflection) of the solar cell (discussed
in Optical Losses); and
➢the collection probability of the solar cell, which depends chiefly on the
surface passivation and the minority carrier lifetime in the base.
When comparing solar cells of the same material type, the most critical material
parameter is the diffusion length and surface passivation. In a cell with perfectly
passivated surface and uniform generation, the equation for the short-circuit current
can be approximated as:
where G is the generation rate, and Ln and Lp are the electron and hole diffusion
lengths respectively. Although this equation makes several assumptions which are
not true for the conditions encountered in most solar cells, the above equation
nevertheless indicates that the short-circuit current depends strongly on the
generation rate and the diffusion length.
Illuminated Current and Short Circuit Current (IL or Isc ?)
IL is the light generated current inside the solar cell and is the correct term to use in
the solar cell equation.
At short circuit conditions the externally measured current is Isc. Since Isc is usually
equal to IL, the two are used interchangeably and for simplicity and the solar cell
equation is written with Isc in place of IL.
In the case of very high series resistance (> 10 Ωcm2) Isc is less than IL and writing the
solar cell equation with Isc is incorrect.
The open-circuit voltage, VOC, is the maximum voltage available from a solar cell,
and this occurs at zero current. The open-circuit voltage corresponds to the amount
of forward bias on the solar cell due to the bias of the solar cell junction with the
light-generated current. The open-circuit voltage is shown on the IV curve below.
An equation for Voc is found by setting the net current equal to zero in the solar
cell equation to give:
➢The above equation shows that Voc depends on the saturation current of the solar
cell and the light-generated current.
➢While Isc typically has a small variation, the key effect is the saturation current,
since this may vary by orders of magnitude.
➢Silicon solar cells on high quality single crystalline material have open-circuit
voltages of up to 730 mV under one sun and AM1.5 conditions, while commercial
devices on multicrystalline silicon typically have open-circuit voltages around 600
mV.
The VOC can also be determined from the carrier concentration
Where the short-circuit current (ISC) decreases with increasing bandgap, the open-
circuit voltage increases as the band gap increases. In an ideal device the VOC is
limited by radiative recombination and the analysis uses the principle of detailed
balance to determine the minimum possible value for J0.
The FF is defined as the ratio of the maximum power from the solar cell to the product
of Voc and Isc. Graphically, the FF is a measure of the "squareness" of the solar cell I-
V curve and is also the area of the largest rectangle which will fit in the IV curve.
As FF is a measure of the "squareness" of the IV curve, a solar cell with a higher
voltage has a larger possible FF since the "rounded" portion of the IV curve takes up
less area. The maximum theoretical FF from a solar cell can be determined by
differentiating the power from a solar cell with respect to voltage and finding where
this is equal to zero. Hence:
However, the above technique does not yield a simple or closed form equation,
and extra equations are needed to find Imp and FF.
The efficiency of a solar cell is determined as the fraction of incident power which
is converted to electricity and is defined as:
Where:
Voc is the open-circuit voltage;
Isc is the short-circuit current;
FF is the fill factor and
η is the efficiency.
The input power for efficiency calculations is 1 kW/m2 or 100 mW/cm2. Thus the
input power for a 100 × 100 mm2 cell is 10 W and for a 156 × 156 mm2 cell is
24.3 W
Efficiency as a function of band gap
To find the efficiency as a function of band gap, the above procedure is repeated
for each band gap. There is a range of bandgaps for the optimum cell efficiency
as shown in the graph below.
Collection Probability
The light-generated current is the integration over the entire device thickness of the
generation rate at a particular point in the device, multiplied by the collection
probability at that point.
The equation for the light-generated current density (JL), with an arbitrary
generation rate (G(x))and collection probability (CP(x)), is shown below, as is the
generation rate in silicon due to the AM1.5 solar spectrum:
where:
q is the electronic charge;
W is the thickness of the device;
α(λ) is the absorption coefficient;
H0 is the number of photons at each wavelength.
Quantum Efficiency
➢The "quantum efficiency" (Q.E.) is the ratio of the number of carriers collected by
the solar cell to the number of photons of a given energy incident on the solar cell.
➢The quantum efficiency for photons with energy below the band gap is zero. A
quantum efficiency curve for an ideal solar cell is shown below.
Photocurrent and Quantum Efficiency
The photocurrent generated by a solar cell under illumination at short circuit is
dependent On the incident light. To relate the photocurrent density, Jsc, to the incident
spectrum we need the cell’s quantum efficiency (QE).
QE (E) is the probability that an incident photon of energy E will deliver one electron to
the external circuit.
J sc = q bs ( E )QE ( E ) dE
Where bs(E) is the incident spectral photon flux density, i.e., the number of photon of
energy in the range E and E+dE which are incident on unit area in unit time and q is
electronic charge.
QE depends upon the absorption coefficient of the solar cell material, the efficiency of
charge separation and the efficiency of charge collection in the device but does not
depend on the incident spectrum.
Two types of QE are used:
The difference between EQE and IQE is that loss of photons due to reflection and
transmission is not considered in EQE.
However, only those photons which are absorbed (excluding reflected and transmitted)
contribute to the solar cell current. Due to this IQE is most commonly used to study cell
performance.
EQE
IQE =
1 − R ( ) − T ( )
current density collected
QE ( E ) = EQE =
q x incident photon flux density
Spectral Response
The spectral response is conceptually similar to the quantum efficiency. The quantum
efficiency gives the number of electrons output by the solar cell compared to the number
of photons incident on the device, while the spectral response is the ratio of the current
generated by the solar cell to the power incident on the solar cell. A spectral response
curve is shown below.
Spectral response is important since it is the spectral response that is measured
from a solar cell, and from this the quantum efficiency is calculated.
The quantum efficiency can be determined from the spectral response by replacing
the power of the light at a particular wavelength with the photon flux for that
wavelength. This gives:
QE . ( nm)
SR ( A / W ) =
1239.8
The photovoltaic effect
➢The collection of light-generated carriers does not by itself give rise to power
generation. In order to generate power, a voltage must be generated as well as a
current.
➢Under short circuit conditions, there is no build up of charge, as the carriers exit the
device as light-generated current.
➢However, if the light-generated carriers are prevented from leaving the solar cell,
then the collection of light-generated carriers causes an increase in the number of
electrons on the n-type side of the p-n junction and a similar increase in holes in
the p-type material.
Tandem solar cells can either be individual cells or connected in series. Series
connected cells are simpler to fabricate but the current is the same though each cell
so this contrains the band gaps that can be used. The most common arrangement for
tandem cells is to grow them monolithically so that all the cells are grown as layers on
the on substrate and tunnel junctions connect the individual cells.
As the number of bandgaps increases the efficiency of the stack also potentially
increases. In reality, the semiconductor materials do not exist to allow for arbitrary
materials with a specific bandgap and of high quality.