Press Release #1

Photovoltaic Trend: Tandem Solar Cells – Record Efficiency for Silicon-based Multi-junction Solar Cell

Silicon solar cells dominate the photovoltaic market today but the technology approaches the theoretical maximum efficiency that can be achieved with silicon as the only absorber material. Tandem solar cells, on the other hand, combine several absorber materials, enabling a better energetic use of the solar irradiance spectrum. Due to their higher efficiency potential, tandem solar cells have a promising future. After intensive research, scientists at Fraunhofer ISE in cooperation with partners have achieved a new efficiency record of 22.3 percent for a multi-junction solar cell made of silicon and III-V semiconductor materials. The outstanding achievement is that the III-V layers were directly grown on the silicon.

Solar cell made of silicon and III-V semiconductor materials
© Fraunhofer ISE/ A. Wekkeli
With the tandem solar cell made of silicon and III-V semiconductor materials, a more energetically efficient use of the solar spectrum is possible, compared to conventional solar cells available today.
Current-voltage characteristic of the new III-V/Si tandem solar cell with an efficiency of 22.3%
© Fraunhofer ISE
Current-voltage characteristic of the new III-V/Si tandem solar cell with an efficiency of 22.3%. The III-V layers were directly deposited on the silicon bottom cell in an epitaxial process. In order to match the atomic bonding between atoms in the crystal structures, a nucleation layer of gallium-phosphide (GaP) and a so-called metamorphic buffer was introduced between the Si and GaAs. Optimizing these transition layers was a main challenge in this project.

Combining the Best Materials

By combining different semiconductor materials, solar cell researchers are attempting to surpass the theoretical efficiency limit of 29.4 percent for a single-junction silicon solar cell, and convert sunlight into electricity even more efficiently. Promising is the combination of silicon material with III-V semiconductor compounds like gallium arsenide. To realize this, one approach is to first deposit the III-V solar cell structures on gallium arsenide substrates, then transfer to a silicon solar cell using semiconductor bonding technology and lastly etch away the gallium-arsenide substrate.  Another less costly approach, however, is to directly grow the III-V layers on the silicon solar cell. In this second approach, the atomic structure must be controlled extremely well during growth so that the gallium and phosphorous atoms arrange on the correct lattice sites at the interface to the silicon material. Also, the distance between the atoms in the crystal lattice must be increased in order to produce the gallium arsenide material. Researchers have been working on these challenges for over ten years. Now they have been able to greatly reduce the defect density in the III-V semiconductor layers on the silicon and have successfully produced a III-V/Si tandem solar cell with a new efficiency record of 22.3 percent using this direct-growth approach. The efficiency value was published in the internationally recognized table of the best research-cell efficiencies worldwide on December 25, 2018.

“We are delighted with this result for the direct growth of III-V semiconductors on silicon, an important research approach for tandem solar cells,” says Dr. Andreas Bett, institute director of Fraunhofer ISE. “In Freiburg, we are presently building a new research center for high efficiency solar cells. Our work on tandem cells will be carried out in the new facilities upon its completion in 2020. With the improved technical infrastructure, we expect the developments in multi-junction solar cells based on silicon  to accelerate rapidly.”

Within the MehrSi project over the past years, the junction between the silicon crystal and the first III-V semiconductor layer of gallium phosphide was investigated and continuously optimized in close cooperation with the research groups of Prof. Thomas Hannappel on the TU Ilmenau and of Prof. Kerstin Volz at the Philipps University Marburg. The defects in the crystalline structure were first made visible and then reduced step by step. “The record efficiency of our III-V/Si tandem solar cell demonstrates that we have achieved a very good understanding of the materials,” explains Dr. Frank Dimroth, coordinator of the MehrSi project. With the successful direct growth of III-V layers on silicon, we can avoid using expensive III-V substrates for epitaxy. This approach is, therefore, a key technology for the cost-effective manufacture of high efficiency tandem solar cells in the future.

The MehrSi project, in which the record multi-junction solar cell on silicon was created, was financed by the German Federal Ministry for Education and Research BMBF. The project partners were the TU Ilmenau, the Philipps University of Marburg and the system manufacturer AIXTRON SE. 

Last modified: