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Cold field emission electrode as a local probe of proximal microscopes: Investigation of defects in monocrystalline silicon solar cells

1 Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Communication, Physics Department, Brno University of Technology, Technická 8, 616 00 Brno, Czech Republic
2 South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, Rapid City, South Dakota, USA

World Journal of Engineering

ISSN: 1708-5284

Article publication date: 21 May 2013

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Abstract

Monocrystalline silicon is still very interesting material for solar cells fabrication due to its quality and external efficiency. Nevertheless during a tailoring of eligible silicon wafers, some inhomogeneities or irregularities emerge and provide defects which give trouble to good operation of solar panels. Generally, there are two classes of defects in silicon wafer: material defects due to imperfections or irregularity in crystal structure (point, line, square or volume defects), and defects induced by wafer processing. To avoid a use of damaged cells, macroscopic and microscopic measurement techniques must be applied. In this paper we present a microscopic method combining electrical noise measurements with scanning probe localization of luminous micro-spots defects. The paper brings experimental results showing local electric and optical investigations of defects in etched monocrystalline silicon solar cells and a use of cold field emission tungsten electrode as a local probe for apertureless scanning near-field optical microscope.

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Citation

Tománek, P., Škarvada, P., Dallaeva, D., Grmela, L., Macků, R. and Smith, S. (2013), "Cold field emission electrode as a local probe of proximal microscopes: Investigation of defects in monocrystalline silicon solar cells", World Journal of Engineering, Vol. 10 No. 2, pp. 119-124. https://doi.org/10.1260/1708-5284.10.2.119

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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