Optical Design of Textured Thin-Film CIGS Solar Cells with Nearly-Invisible Nanowire Assisted Front Contacts

The conductivity of transparent front contacts can be improved by patterned metallic nanowires, albeit at the cost of optical loss. The associated optical penalty can be strongly reduced by texturization of the cell stack. Remarkably, the nanowires themselves are not textured and not covered in our...

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Main Authors: Joop van Deelen, Ahmed Omar, Marco Barink
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-04-01
Series:Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/10/4/392
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spelling doaj-59d727ce9b234282a9f9b36b12854a2e2020-11-24T23:44:26ZengMDPI AGMaterials1996-19442017-04-0110439210.3390/ma10040392ma10040392Optical Design of Textured Thin-Film CIGS Solar Cells with Nearly-Invisible Nanowire Assisted Front ContactsJoop van Deelen0Ahmed Omar1Marco Barink2TNO/Solliance, High Tech Campus 21, 5656 AE Eindhoven, The NetherlandsTNO/Solliance, High Tech Campus 21, 5656 AE Eindhoven, The NetherlandsTNO/Holst, High Tech Campus 31, 5656 AE Eindhoven, The NetherlandsThe conductivity of transparent front contacts can be improved by patterned metallic nanowires, albeit at the cost of optical loss. The associated optical penalty can be strongly reduced by texturization of the cell stack. Remarkably, the nanowires themselves are not textured and not covered in our design. This was shown by optical modeling where the width of the nanowire, the texture height and the texture period were varied in order to obtain a good insight into the general trends. The optical performance can be improved dramatically as the reflection, which is the largest optical loss, can be reduced by 95% of the original value. The spectra reveal absorption in the Cu(In,Ga)Se2 (CIGS) layer of 95% and reflection below 2% over a large part of the spectrum. In essence, a virtually black CIGS cell stack can be achieved for textured cells with a metal nanogrid. Moreover, it turned out that the ratio between the width of the nanowire and the height of the texture is a critical parameter for optical losses.http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/10/4/392solar cellsnanogridthin-film solarfront contact
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joop van Deelen
Ahmed Omar
Marco Barink
spellingShingle Joop van Deelen
Ahmed Omar
Marco Barink
Optical Design of Textured Thin-Film CIGS Solar Cells with Nearly-Invisible Nanowire Assisted Front Contacts
Materials
solar cells
nanogrid
thin-film solar
front contact
author_facet Joop van Deelen
Ahmed Omar
Marco Barink
author_sort Joop van Deelen
title Optical Design of Textured Thin-Film CIGS Solar Cells with Nearly-Invisible Nanowire Assisted Front Contacts
title_short Optical Design of Textured Thin-Film CIGS Solar Cells with Nearly-Invisible Nanowire Assisted Front Contacts
title_full Optical Design of Textured Thin-Film CIGS Solar Cells with Nearly-Invisible Nanowire Assisted Front Contacts
title_fullStr Optical Design of Textured Thin-Film CIGS Solar Cells with Nearly-Invisible Nanowire Assisted Front Contacts
title_full_unstemmed Optical Design of Textured Thin-Film CIGS Solar Cells with Nearly-Invisible Nanowire Assisted Front Contacts
title_sort optical design of textured thin-film cigs solar cells with nearly-invisible nanowire assisted front contacts
publisher MDPI AG
series Materials
issn 1996-1944
publishDate 2017-04-01
description The conductivity of transparent front contacts can be improved by patterned metallic nanowires, albeit at the cost of optical loss. The associated optical penalty can be strongly reduced by texturization of the cell stack. Remarkably, the nanowires themselves are not textured and not covered in our design. This was shown by optical modeling where the width of the nanowire, the texture height and the texture period were varied in order to obtain a good insight into the general trends. The optical performance can be improved dramatically as the reflection, which is the largest optical loss, can be reduced by 95% of the original value. The spectra reveal absorption in the Cu(In,Ga)Se2 (CIGS) layer of 95% and reflection below 2% over a large part of the spectrum. In essence, a virtually black CIGS cell stack can be achieved for textured cells with a metal nanogrid. Moreover, it turned out that the ratio between the width of the nanowire and the height of the texture is a critical parameter for optical losses.
topic solar cells
nanogrid
thin-film solar
front contact
url http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/10/4/392
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AT marcobarink opticaldesignoftexturedthinfilmcigssolarcellswithnearlyinvisiblenanowireassistedfrontcontacts
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