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The front transparent conductive oxide layer is a source of significant optical and electrical losses in silicon heterojunction solar cells because of the trade-off between free-carrier absorption and sheet resistance. We demonstrate that hydrogen-doped indium oxide (IO:H), which has an electron mobility of over 100 cm(2)/V s, reduces these losses compared to traditional, low-mobility transparent conductive oxides, but suffers from high contact resistance at the interface of the IO:H layer and the silver front electrode grid. This problem is avoided by inserting a thin indium tin oxide (ITO) layer at the IO:H/silver interface. Such IO:H/ITO bilayers have low contact resistance, sheet resistance, and free-carrier absorption, and outperform IO:H-only or ITO-only layers in solar cells. We report a certified efficiency of 22.1% for a 4-cm(2) screen-printed silicon heterojunction solar cell employing an 10:H/ITO bilayer as the front transparent conductive oxide. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Christophe Ballif, Jonathan Emanuel Thomet, Julien Hurni, Mathieu Gérard Boccard, Luca Massimiliano Antognini, Julie Amandine Dreon, Vincent Philippe Paratte, Davi Marcelo Fébba