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Electrochemical nature of contact firing reactions for screen-printed silicon solar cells: origin of "gray finger" phenomenon

Authors
Kim, Hee-SooCho, Sung-BinKim, HeesanKim, DonghwanDovrat, MikiEytan, GuyHuh, Joo-Youl
Issue Date
Sep-2016
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
crystalline Si solar cell; screen-printed Ag metallization; contact firing; electrochemical reaction; Ag crystallite; mixed potential theory
Citation
PROGRESS IN PHOTOVOLTAICS, v.24, no.9, pp.1237 - 1250
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
PROGRESS IN PHOTOVOLTAICS
Volume
24
Number
9
Start Page
1237
End Page
1250
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/87664
DOI
10.1002/pip.2783
ISSN
1062-7995
Abstract
Fire-through Ag thick-film metallization of crystalline Si (c-Si) solar cells often yields macroscopically non-uniform contact quality over the cell area, degrading the cell performance and causing cell-to-cell variations of the conversion efficiency in a cell production line. This study analyzes the root cause of the gray finger phenomenon, in which part of the fire-through Ag contact gridlines of a c-Si solar cell appears in gray or dark contrast in the electroluminescence images owing to high contact resistance. Few Ag crystallites were formed on the corrugated emitter surface at the contact interfaces underneath the gray fingers. The present results revealed that the gray finger phenomenon was caused by a short-circuit spot that formed between the Ag gridlines and underlying Si emitter during contact firing. The electrochemical reactions involved in fire-through Ag contact formation established a potential difference between the sintered Ag gridlines and Si emitter separated by molten glass. The molten glass acted as an electrolyte containing mobile Ag+ and O2- ions during contact firing. Therefore, the short-circuiting between the sintered Ag gridlines and Si emitter produced a galvanic cell during contact firing, which inhibited Ag crystallite formation at the contact interface along the gridlines in a short circuit and produced the gray fingers. The firing reactions in Ag thick-film contact formation could be interpreted in terms of the mixed potential theory of corrosion. The degradation of cell performance because of the gray finger phenomenon was also evaluated for 6-in. screen-printed c-Si solar cells. Copyright (c) 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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