2015
DOI: 10.1002/pip.2713
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Solar‐grade boron emitters by BF3 plasma doping and role of the co‐implanted fluorine

Abstract: We investigate the electrical properties and dopant profiles of boron emitters performed by plasma immersion ion implantation from boron trifluoride (BF 3 ) gas precursor, thermally annealed and passivated by silicon oxide/silicon nitride stacks. High thermal budgets are required for doses compatible with screen-printed metal pastes, to reach very good activation rates. However, if good sheet resistances and saturation current densities may be obtained, we met strong limitations of the implied open-circuit vol… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Although one might conclude that there is a correlation between the inactive boron dose and the increase in J 01 , we so far cannot exclude other recombination mechanisms, e.g. a different defect structure for the increasing implant doses compared to the lowest, which might also involve the bulk silicon [20]. A hint for this can be seen in the intercept lifetime in Table 3.…”
Section: Co-annealed Solar Cellsmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…Although one might conclude that there is a correlation between the inactive boron dose and the increase in J 01 , we so far cannot exclude other recombination mechanisms, e.g. a different defect structure for the increasing implant doses compared to the lowest, which might also involve the bulk silicon [20]. A hint for this can be seen in the intercept lifetime in Table 3.…”
Section: Co-annealed Solar Cellsmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…These low J o values show the distinct advantage of implanting into the pc-Si/SiO 2 /c-Si contact structure rather than into the wafer itself, where J o values one order of magnitude higher are typically achieved. [4,21] For the B implanted samples the J o values are between 15 -35 fA/cm 2 . The B 2 H 6 implanted species show a decreasing J o value for increasing dose, while the other samples do not show much of a trend with implant dose.…”
Section: Passivationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[3] However, in some IBC cell designs, an even simpler plasma immersion ion implanter (PIII) can be utilized for significant capEx and production cost savings. [4] Recently an interdigitated back contact cell was introduced using c-Si/SiO 2 /poly-Si passivated contacts formed by ion implantation [5][6][7][8][9] with a record 23.9% efficiency achieved by Rienäcker et al [10] In this cell configuration, the ions are implanted into a-Si or polycrystalline-Si (pc-Si) layers separated from the c-Si wafer by a thin oxide layer, instead of directly into the c-Si wafer. This eliminates the end-of-range damage such as dislocation loops [11] to the wafer, which in turn, lowers the post implantation thermal budget needed to activate and diffuse dopants in the pc-Si layer, rather than anneal out induced defects in the c-Si.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The reason for such degradation is not clearly established and can be due to deep defects after annealing and/or activation of recombination centers linked to the implantation ofF atoms [18].…”
Section: A Boran Emitter Fabricationmentioning
confidence: 99%