Broadband angle-independent antireflection coatings on nanostructured light trapping solar cells
Author(s) -
Abraham VázquezGuardado,
Javaneh Boroumand,
Daniel Franklin,
Debashis Chanda
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
physical review materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.439
H-Index - 42
eISSN - 2476-0455
pISSN - 2475-9953
DOI - 10.1103/physrevmaterials.2.035201
Subject(s) - materials science , specular reflection , bilayer , optoelectronics , optics , anti reflective coating , scattering , silicon , silicon nitride , solar cell , coating , nanotechnology , genetics , physics , membrane , biology
Backscattering from nanostructured surfaces greatly diminishes the efficacy of light trapping solar cells. While the analytical design of broadband, angle-independent antireflection coatings on nanostructured surfaces proved inefficient, numerical optimization proves a viable alternative. Here, we numerically design and experimentally verify the performance of single and bilayer antireflection coatings on a 2D hexagonal diffractive light trapping pattern on crystalline silicon substrates. Three well-known antireflection coatings, aluminum oxide, silicon nitride, and silicon oxide, which also double as high-quality surface passivation materials, are studied in the 400–1000 nm band. By varying thickness and conformity, the optimal parameters that minimize the broadband total reflectance (specular and scattering) from the nanostructured surface are obtained. The design results in a single-layer antireflection coating with normal-angle wavelength-integrated reflectance below 4% and a bilayer antireflection coating demonstrating reflection down to 1.5%. We show experimentally an angle-averaged reflectance of ∼5.2% up to 60° incident angle from the optimized bilayer antireflection-coated nanostructured surface, paving the path toward practical implementation of the light trapping solar cells.
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