Impacts of Dislocations and Residual Thermal Tension on Monolithically Integrated InGaP/GaAs/Si Triple-Junction Solar Cells

Authors
Kim, YeonhwaShin, Hyun-BeomJu, EunkyoMadarang, May AngeluChu, Rafael JumarLaryn, TsimafeiKim, TaeheeLee, In-HwanKang, Ho KwanChoi, Won JunJung, Daehwan
Issue Date
2024-08
Publisher
WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
Citation
Solar RRL
Abstract
Direct epitaxy of III-V materials on Si is a promising approach for highly stable, scalable, and efficient Si-based multijunction solar cells. However, challenges lie in overcoming epitaxial dislocations and residual thermal strain generated by lattice constant and thermal-expansion-coefficient mismatches, respectively. Herein, a 15.2% efficient InGaP/GaAs/Si triple-junction solar cell with an open-circuit voltage of 2.36 V by using In0.10Al0.16Ga0.74As digital-alloy dislocation filter layers is first demonstrated. The filter layers are utilized in the n-GaAs buffer on Si to reduce threading dislocation density to 4 x 10(7) cm(-2) while maintaining optical transparency to Si bottom cell. Then, the impacts of threading dislocations and residual tension on InGaP/GaAs/Si cells are systematically investigated by comparing them to the co-grown InGaP/GaAs tandem cells on a native GaAs substrate. Based on the comparative analysis, a strategy to suppress material deformation and defect formation toward 30% efficient InGaP/GaAs/Si triple-junction solar cells is proposed.
Keywords
GAAS; SI; GROWTH; SEMICONDUCTORS; EFFICIENCY; SUBSTRATE; LIFETIME; GAP/SI; dislocations; epitaxial growth; monolithic III-V/Si tandem; solar cell; thermal tension
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/150524
DOI
10.1002/solr.202400318
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2024
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