Jeanette Lindroos
Aalto University
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Featured researches published by Jeanette Lindroos.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2014
Jeanette Lindroos; Yacine Boulfrad; Marko Yli-Koski; Hele Savin
Multicrystalline silicon (mc-Si) is currently dominating the silicon solar cell market due to low ingot costs, but its efficiency is limited by transition metals, extended defects, and light-induced degradation (LID). LID is traditionally associated with a boron-oxygen complex, but the origin of the degradation in the top of the commercial mc-Si brick is revealed to be interstitial copper. We demonstrate that both a large negative corona charge and an aluminum oxide thin film with a built-in negative charge decrease the interstitial copper concentration in the bulk, preventing LID in mc-Si.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2016
Alessandro Inglese; Jeanette Lindroos; Henri Vahlman; Hele Savin
The presence of copper contamination is known to cause strong light-induced degradation (Cu-LID) in silicon. In this paper, we parametrize the recombination activity of light-activated copper defects in terms of Shockley—Read—Hall recombination statistics through injection- and temperature dependent lifetime spectroscopy (TDLS) performed on deliberately contaminated float zone silicon wafers. We obtain an accurate fit of the experimental data via two non-interacting energy levels, i.e., a deep recombination center featuring an energy level at Ec−Et=0.48−0.62 eV with a moderate donor-like capture asymmetry ( k=1.7−2.6) and an additional shallow energy state located at Ec−Et=0.1−0.2 eV, which mostly affects the carrier lifetime only at high-injection conditions. Besides confirming these defect parameters, TDLS measurements also indicate a power-law temperature dependence of the capture cross sections associated with the deep energy state. Eventually, we compare these results with the available literature d...
Applied Physics Letters | 2012
Jeanette Lindroos; Marko Yli-Koski; Antti Haarahiltunen; Hele Savin
Although light-induced degradation (LID) in crystalline silicon is attributed to the formation of boron-oxygen recombination centers, copper contamination of silicon has recently been observed to result in similar degradation. As positively charged interstitial copper stays mobile at room temperature in silicon, we show that the bulk copper concentration can be reduced by depositing a large negative charge onto the wafer surface. Consequently, light-induced degradation is reduced significantly in both low- and high-resistivity boron-doped Czochralski-grown silicon.
Applied Physics Letters | 2015
Alessandro Inglese; Jeanette Lindroos; Hele Savin
Copper is a harmful metal impurity that significantly impacts the performance of silicon-based devices if present in active regions. In this contribution, we propose a fast method consisting of simultaneous illumination and annealing for the detection of copper contamination in p-type silicon. Our results show that, within minutes, such method is capable of producing a significant reduction of the minority carrier lifetime. A spatial distribution map of copper contamination can then be obtained through the lifetime values measured before and after degradation. In order to separate the effect of the light-activated copper defects from the other metastable complexes in low resistivity Cz-silicon, we carried out a dark anneal at 200 °C, which is known to fully recover the boron-oxygen defect. Similar to the boron-oxygen behavior, we show that the dark anneal also recovers the copper defects. However, the recovery is only partial and it can be used to identify the possible presence of copper contamination.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2014
Jeanette Lindroos; Hele Savin
Light-induced degradation (LID) is a deleterious effect in crystalline silicon, which is considered to originate from recombination-active boron-oxygen complexes and/or copper-related defects. Although LID in both cases appears as a fast initial decay followed by a second slower degradation, we show that the time constant of copper-related degradation increases with increasing boron concentration in contrast to boron-oxygen LID. Temperature-dependent analysis reveals that the defect formation is limited by copper diffusion. Finally, interface defect density measurements confirm that copper-related LID is dominated by recombination in the wafer bulk.
Applied Physics Letters | 2014
Yacine Boulfrad; Jeanette Lindroos; Matthias Wagner; Franziska Wolny; Marko Yli-Koski; Hele Savin
In addition to boron and oxygen, copper is also known to cause light-induced degradation (LID) in silicon. We have demonstrated previously that LID can be prevented by depositing negative corona charge onto the wafer surfaces. Positively charged interstitial copper ions are proposed to diffuse to the negatively charged surface and consequently empty the bulk of copper. In this study, copper out-diffusion was confirmed by chemical analysis of the near surface region of negatively/positively charged silicon wafer. Furthermore, LID was permanently removed by etching the copper-rich surface layer after negative charge deposition. These results demonstrate that (i) copper can be effectively removed from the bulk by negative charge, (ii) under illumination copper forms a recombination active defect in the bulk of the wafer causing severe light induced degradation.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2013
Jeanette Lindroos; David P. Fenning; D. J. Backlund; Erik Verlage; Angelika Gorgulla; Stefan K. Estreicher; Hele Savin; Tonio Buonassisi
Physica Status Solidi-rapid Research Letters | 2010
Ville Vähänissi; Antti Haarahiltunen; Heli Talvitie; Marko Yli-Koski; Jeanette Lindroos; Hele Savin
Physica Status Solidi-rapid Research Letters | 2013
Jeanette Lindroos; Marko Yli-Koski; Antti Haarahiltunen; Martin C. Schubert; Hele Savin
Energy Procedia | 2013
Yacine Boulfrad; Jeanette Lindroos; Alessandro Inglese; Marko Yli-Koski; Hele Savin