Thermal Evolution of Defects and Hydrogenated Surfaces in nc-Si:H

ORAL

Abstract

Photovoltaics research has created a push for new materials and nanotechnology is a primary focus. The most familiar of the nanomaterials is hydrogenated nanocrystalline silicon (nc-Si:H). nc-Si:H has less light-induced degradation than a-Si:H and is cheaper to make than crystalline silicon. X-ray diffraction (XRD), small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), and electron spin resonance (ESR) experiments explored the crystallite size, orientation and defect density on nc-Si:H samples with varying crystalline volume fraction (CVF). Samples with CVF $\sim $ 50{\%} show preferential [220] crystallite orientation, whose microstructure changes with thermal annealing. Modeling of SAXS data for as-grown material shows that the crystallite surfaces are 20{\%} to 40{\%} hydrogenated. After high temperature annealing, hydrogen leaves these surfaces and the ESR signal increases by about 10 times. We discuss these results and then speculate on the relationship between hydrogen, defects, and microstructure.

Authors

  • Kristin Kiriluk

    Colorado School of Mines

  • Don Williamson

    Colorado School of Mines

  • David Bobela

    National Renewable Energy Lab

  • Arun Madan

    MV Systems, Inc.

  • Feng Zhu

    MV Systems, Inc.

  • P. Craig Taylor

    Colorado School of Mines