Cadmium telluride films and solar cells
- 1 May 1984
- journal article
- Published by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices
- Vol. 31 (5) , 528-538
- https://doi.org/10.1109/T-ED.1984.21564
Abstract
CdTe thin films for solar cell applications have been deposited by close-spaced vapor transport and by hot-wall vacuum evaporation. As-deposited films are p-type with hole densities that increase to values of 1 × 1016cm-3with increasing substrate temperature. A variety of experimental results can be interpreted either in terms of doping by native defects such as cadmium vacancies or doping by diffusion from the graphite substrate, with evidence for self-compensation. Many CdS/CdTe/graphite solar cells have been prepared by vacuum evaporation of CdS onto thin-film CdTe, which have low values ofJ_{O} \sim 10^{-9}A/cm2and high values ofJ_{SC} \sim 17mA/cm2. The open-circuit voltage is low at 0.48 V for CdS deposition at 300° C, but increases with decreasing CdS deposition temperature. The highest efficiency prepared to date is 6.4 percent. Tile efficiency is limited at present by the fill factor, associated with a total series resistivity in the light of the order of 10 Ω-cm2. Supporting research on low-resistance contacts to p-type CdTe, grain boundary properties and passivation in p-type CdTe bicrystals and thin films, and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy of junction interfaces is briefly described.Keywords
This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: