UNSW School of Photovoltaic & Renewable Energy Engineering |
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Johannes Seif (47Min)
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Abstract Unlike standard diffused homojunction devices, which are typically limited by their highly recombination-active semiconductor-to-metal contacts, silicon heterojunction (SHJ) devices exhibit excellent surface passivation. This is enabled by the application of intrinsic and doped a-Si:H films to the wafer surfaces. These a-Si:H layers, however, entail drawbacks for optical performance and carrier transport. We investigate non-traditional materials for SHJ devices with the goal of replacing the a-Si:H or the transparent electrodes. These materials include nanocrystalline silicon (nc-Si:H) and organic semiconductors for contact formation; amorphous silicon suboxides (a-SiOx:H) for surface passivation; and transparent electrodes applied by atomic layer deposition (ALD) as protective layers against subsequent processing steps. Along with the optical and electrical properties of these materials, we study the impact on device performance associated with their deposition. For this we test the devices under standard testing conditions (25°C) and at elevated temperatures closer to those encountered in the field. Click here to see all available video seminars. Click here to go to the SPREE HOMEPAGE. |
| Brief Bio Johannes Seif studied Physics at the University of Tübingen and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zürich from where he graduated in 2009. Following his studies, he did an internship at Oerlikon Solar (Trübbach, CH) in the group for Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) and reactor development and started a PhD at PV-Lab (EPFL Neuchâtel, CH) in 2010. In his thesis project he focussed on PECVD process development for thin silicon layers and their application in silicon heterojunction solar cells. After graduating from EPFL in 2015 he continued working at PV-Lab developing c-Si bottom cells for c-Si/perovskite tandem devices. Before joining UNSW in July 2018, he worked at Meyer Burger Research as PECVD process engineer and INDEOtec as scientific consultant/project manager. Now at UNSW he is managing the ARENA project for the development of PECVD processes for transition metal oxide layers for application in passivating contact solar cells. |