Photo by Kathy F. Atkinson 

UD’s Ujjwal Das and collaborators work to improve photovoltage technology

In their quest to improve our ability to capture and distribute the Earth’s greatest potential source of power—the sun—scientists are exploring every square nanometer of solar cells, looking for new ways to improve their voltage and efficiency, while reducing costs.

The University of Delaware has a distinctive muscle in this effort in its Institute of Energy Conversion (IEC), the oldest continuously operating solar research site in the world. IEC has experts in thin-film and crystalline silicon photovoltaic science under its roof. The ideas that emerge when those experts interact can prompt new experiments, new possibilities and new solutions.

Research scientist Ujjwal Das is one of IEC’s experts, specializing in addressing defects on the surface of silicon, defects that–if unaddressed–reduce voltage and current in silicon solar cells, the most familiar kind of solar technology for most consumers and the most frequently installed type of solar system in residential settings.

Now, Das and collaborators at Georgia Tech and the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, have won an $800,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Energy for a new approach to improving the efficiency of silicon solar cells in ways easily adapted for standard manufacturing processes.

Specifically, Das and collaborators are focused on improving the efficiency of Passivated Emitter Rear Cells (PERC cells, for short), which are silicon solar cells designed with special materials and varying textures on the rear side of the cell to improve efficiency. The word “passivation” describes the result of treatments that reduce recombination, a phenomenon that bumps electrons from their electricity-generation mode and into a lower level of activity, gouging cell performance.

Das will focus on surface passivation. UNLV’s specialty is characterizing the materials to understand how the passivation is happening. And Georgia Tech will integrate the materials into the actual cell.

PERC cells are a fast-growing sector of solar technology, especially because of a recent approach that uses aluminum oxide as the passivating material. Aluminum oxide is abundant and relatively cheap, but has not produced enough voltage, Das said. In addition, it only works well on one side of the cell.

Das and his collaborators have demonstrated a new approach – using the previously untested elements sulfur and selenium – that appears to work better. They don’t know why or how yet. The new grant will support that study and further development of the technology.

“One objective of our novel approach is investigating whether we can use these elements, sulfur and selenium, more effectively for both surfaces,” Das said. “This is still largely unknown. And there are many more relevant questions. How is it happening? Why is it happening?”

Das drew on IEC’s thin-film expertise and deep knowledge of materials science to develop and prove the potential of the new approach he and his collaborators now are pursuing.

Thin layers of amorphous silicon nitride are applied using IEC’s plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition system.
Thin layers of amorphous silicon nitride are applied using IEC’s plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition system.

The sulfur and selenium have a certain “healing” effect on the surface of silicon, where defects emerge in the crystalline structure, he said.

“There will be other refinements,” Das said. “This one will give us improved voltage. To improve the current we have to make other refinements, which is not the focus in this project. But that’s where we can further improve efficiency.”

Das said it was “sort of an accident” that sulfur and selenium emerged as new candidates for this work.

About six years ago, he was looking for silicon-surface passivating materials that had a crystal structure similar to silicon’s.

Zinc sulfide emerged as a possibility with promising results at low temperatures, but its potential degraded at high temperatures.

“I realized that the zinc sulfide is decomposing into zinc and sulfur at high temperatures,” Das said. “It is the zinc that is causing us the problem at high temperatures. What if I eliminate the zinc? I just want the sulfur. That’s how the concept came up.”

Because IEC has expertise in the use of sulfur and selenium and has the expertise to use hydrogen selenide, a toxic material, Das discussed these ideas with others in the center.

A student – Hsiang-Yu “Stella” Liu – was looking for a new topic to research at the time. The sulfur passivation project seemed promising and she did the original work, Das said. Liu earned her doctorate in materials science and engineering in 2018.

They worked with IEC’s Greg Henket, whose expertise is using hydrogen sulfide and hydrogen selenide reactions to make solar cells with thin-film coatings of copper, indium, gallium and selenide (CIGS).

This device holds a wafer at a 60-degree angle, allowing scientists to treat both sides of a silicon wafer simultaneously. The blue wafer shows the front surface of a solar cell with fine metal grids and a bus bar for electrical contact. The blue color comes from a thin layer (80 nanometers) of amorphous silicon nitride film that protects the silicon surface and provides anti-reflection properties for the solar cell.
This device holds a wafer at a 60-degree angle, allowing scientists to treat both sides of a silicon wafer simultaneously. The blue wafer shows the front surface of a solar cell with fine metal grids and a bus bar for electrical contact. The blue color comes from a thin layer (80 nanometers) of amorphous silicon nitride film that protects the silicon surface and provides anti-reflection properties for the solar cell.

“In this building we work on all types of thin films,” Das said. “That’s how we generate ideas. Sulfur and selenium are used for CIGS solar cells. What if we try some of these with silicon solar cells?”

“This is a creative solution to a problem in one technology [silicon solar cells] by using a capability we developed for a totally different kind of solar cell [a thin-film cell],” said William Shafarman, director of IEC and professor of materials science and engineering. “We are a comprehensive research center on different kind of solar cells and that enables us to have that kind of synergy. We are all looking for the most efficiency and the lowest cost. This is a new approach to that.”

PERC cell efficiency now is rated at just under 22% in the manufacturing setting. Das said his team expects to show more than 22% efficiency and sees a potential for more than 25%.

Those numbers are important as researchers strive to meet the goals of DOE’s Solar Energy Technologies Office. The goals, first developed in 2011, aim to bring the costs of solar electricity into competitive range with conventional sources. They met the 2020 goal of trimming the cost of utility-scale photovoltaic solar power from 28 cents per kilowatt hour in 2010 to 6 cents three years ahead of schedule – in 2017. Residential solar costs dropped from 52 cents to 16 cents in the same period, while commercial solar went from 40 cents to 11 cents. (The numbers reflect the levelized cost of energy, without state or local incentives

The 2030 goal is to reduce the utility-scale cost in half–to 3 cents.

“That’s ambitious, but not overly so,” Shafarman said. “It’s doable. If you look at our past history, we’re on that trajectory. Prices come down and then there are blips and fluctuations, but we’ve made incredible progress.”

As other goals are met–reducing the cost of energy storage, for example–the National Renewable Energy Lab projects that solar energy could supply about half of the nation’s electricity by 2050.

About the Institute of Energy Conversion

The University of Delaware’s Institute of Energy Conversion, founded in 1972, is the oldest continuously operating solar research institute in the world. Its mission is to be the university leader in creating commercially relevant solutions to problems in thin-film solar cells, energy materials and systems. IEC, a U.S. Department of Energy Center of Excellence for Photovoltaic Research and Education—one of only two in the United States—is recognized for leading-edge research and for training students in solar energy devices and their integration into sustainable energy systems.

About the researcher

Ujjwal Das earned his doctorate in physics at the Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science at Jadavpur University in India. His research focuses on bulk and surface defect passivation for crystalline silicon solar cells and the development of alternative processes for thin-film perovskite solar cells.