There was no damage visible on the cells after damp heat. High-resolution electron microscopy images (cross-section and top view) of similar samples showed no differences either. Thus, the damp heat treatment up to 50 h discussed in this paper led to mild damage, i.e., no physical damage, such as delamination, but degradation in the electrical (and optical) properties.
For all cells exposed to damp heat, we observed changes in performance over time. Usually, the treatment has a detrimental influence on the performance. It is the main objective of this paper to contribute to the understanding where (in the cell) these changes result from and how certain parameters, namely sodium content, influence the degradation behavior. However, in order to interpret the data, it is necessary to distinguish between the influences of moisture (“damp heat”) and heat (“dry heat”).
3.1. Damp and Dry Heat
In
Figure 1, the results from the IV measurements of samples with sodium content A are shown comparing damp and dry heat treatment. The set of samples exposed to dry heat shows no significant aging effect in any of the IV parameters, whereas the set of samples exposed to damp heat shows a degradation behavior. While the open circuit voltage and the short circuit current remain unaffected, mainly the fill factor and the efficiency are affected.
Figure 1.
Comparison of damp and dry heat treatment of the set of samples with sodium content A; (a) open circuit voltage; (b) short circuit current density; (c) fill factor; (d) efficiency. All values are scaled to the initial (0 h) value.
Figure 1.
Comparison of damp and dry heat treatment of the set of samples with sodium content A; (a) open circuit voltage; (b) short circuit current density; (c) fill factor; (d) efficiency. All values are scaled to the initial (0 h) value.
Regarding the damp heat treatment, the diode-related internal parameter,
, as a measure for the CIGSe/CdS junction quality and
, being related to carrier collection, do not significantly change. Thus, the observations from
Figure 1 suggest that the performance after aging is limited by a decreasing fill factor caused by the detrimental influence of an increasing series resistance. The
values determined from the IV characteristics confirm an increase by a factor of 1.4 (4.2) for the samples with sodium content A (B). Since this change can only be observed for samples exposed to damp heat, we conclude that moisture plays a key role in the degradation process.
In contrast to the overall degradation of the damp heat samples, we observe an intermediate increase in fill factor and efficiency after 5 h and 15 h of damp heat treatment, hinting at a superposition of an enhancing and a deteriorating mechanism involved in the aging process.
3.2. Electrical Performance
Since we have confirmed damp heat as a suitable technique for the simulation of aging, in the following, we will only discuss data from the sets of samples that were exposed to damp heat. None of the IV parameters of the samples exposed to dry heat changed beyond the level of confidence of the measurement.
Time-resolved data on the degradation behavior of the samples with respect to the sodium content in the CIGSe absorber layer are presented in
Figure 2. Both sets of samples show a decrease of efficiency and fill factor under exposure to damp heat. However, only for the cells with lower sodium content A did we observe a slight increase in efficiency and fill factor before the overall decline dominates. As mentioned in
Section 3.1, this suggests that the degradation is superimposed by an enhancing mechanism, initially. Its origin is not understood, yet. The degradation is much more pronounced for the samples with higher sodium content B. While visible for lower amounts of sodium in the sample, the enhancing mechanism is suppressed at this higher sodium content; thus, the degradation dominates for all damp heat time steps. As we have seen before, for the samples with sodium content A, the open circuit voltage and the short circuit current density do not decline. For the samples with sodium content B, the same is true, except for the dip after 5 h of damp heat.
Figure 2.
Damp heat treatment of the set of samples with sodium content A and B; (a) open circuit voltage; (b) short circuit current density; (c) fill factor; (d) efficiency. All values are scaled to the initial (0 h) value.
Figure 2.
Damp heat treatment of the set of samples with sodium content A and B; (a) open circuit voltage; (b) short circuit current density; (c) fill factor; (d) efficiency. All values are scaled to the initial (0 h) value.
3.4. Capacitance and Doping
The derivation of net doping profiles from CV measurements usually contributes to the understanding of the effects of sodium on the CIGSe absorber. In
Figure 5(a) the influence of the sodium content on the net doping,
, of the absorber (before damp heat), derived from the measurement of more than 150 cells in total (from the same manufacturing run as the other samples), is depicted. With increasing sodium content, the net doping increases. Described by many authors, this is commonly attributed to a decrease of the degree of compensation in the CIGSe absorber (for instance, since sodium suppresses donor type
antisites [
6]).
Figure 5.
(a) Net doping, , of the absorber in dependence of the sodium content in the Cu(In,Ga)Se (CIGSe) layer; (b) change of the net doping, , of the sets of samples with sodium content A and B under damp and dry heat treatment.
Figure 5.
(a) Net doping, , of the absorber in dependence of the sodium content in the Cu(In,Ga)Se (CIGSe) layer; (b) change of the net doping, , of the sets of samples with sodium content A and B under damp and dry heat treatment.
CV measurements were carried out after each damp heat aging step, as well. The trend of the capacitance (at zero bias) under damp heat treatment is plotted in
Figure 6. We will use this representation of the CV data in
Section 3.5 to explain the degradation behavior of our solar cells. Additionally, the net doping of the absorber was derived from the CV data (
Figure 5(b)). In accordance with
Figure 5(a), the samples with sodium content B exhibit a higher net doping, as more sodium was supplied during CIGSe deposition. Apparently, for the samples with sodium content A, the net doping remains unaffected under dry heat treatment, while there is a slight decrease for the samples with sodium content B. Exposure to damp heat significantly decreases the apparent net doping for both sets of samples; thereby, this effect is much more pronounced for the samples with higher sodium content (samples of B).
3.5. Discussion and Interpretation
First, we try to explain the trend in the capacitance data in terms of doping, but motivated by the contradiction of this interpretation with the IV data, we then propose a new explanation.
The more pronounced decrease of the net doping with higher sodium content (
Figure 5(b)) fits well with the more pronounced degradation of the whole cell in terms of fill factor and efficiency (
Figure 2). As a simple model, one could imagine that sodium is “washed out” of the cell by the water under damp heat conditions. Thus, degradation is solely visible (and sodium-dependent) in the presence of water, whereas in dry heat, the samples remain unaffected. One may then speculate that the decrease in net doping for samples with sodium content B under dry heat treatment (
Figure 5(b)) is explained by the influence of ambient air humidity during measurement, due to the hygroscopic nature of compounds, like sodium selenide. When the sodium content decreases, the degree of compensation in the material increases again, thereby having a detrimental effect on the net doping (
Figure 5(a)). The CV measurements showed that along with the decrease of net doping, the width of the space charge region increased. If one assumes a fixed charge carrier diffusion length, the short circuit current density should increase along with the width of the space charge region under damp heat treatment, due to a better carrier collection in the absorber.
Nevertheless,
remains nearly constant. Dropping the assumption of a fixed diffusion length (which is rather unlikely, since the carrier lifetime in CIGSe decreases already under atmospheric conditions [
13]), the increase in the space charge region width had to compensate for the decrease in diffusion length completely in order to leave
unaffected. This rather unlikely relationship led us to look for an alternative explanation of all collected data. Moreover, the apparent decrease in net doping for the damp heat treated solar cells contradicts their stable open circuit voltages.
The standard interpretation of the capacitance data is based on strong simplifications of the device: with the impedance analyzer, we measure the complex resistance of the sample. Under the assumption of a parallel equivalent circuit of a capacitor (formed by the space charge region of the p-n junction) and a shunt resistance, we obtain a capacitance value. According to the again simplified interpretation as a plain plate-type capacitor, the capacitance,
C, depends on the distance of the plates (
i.e., the width of the space charge region,
w) and the area,
A, of the capacitor (
i.e., the area of the p-n junction):
(where
ϵ is the dielectric constant of the CIGSe absorber and
the vacuum permittivity). Since not only the junction, but also the front and back contacts of the solar cell extend over this area, it is likely that the non-idealities of these contacts have an influence on the measurement.
We therefore propose an explanation of all measured data based on the corrosion of the planar contacts. Sodium in the CIGSe solar cell in conjunction with water leads to the corrosion of both planar contacts: the ZnO:Al window layer and the molybdenum back contact. However, it seems more likely that the latter process and, especially, the degradation of the molybdenum-CIGSe interface is responsible for the sodium-related degradation of the solar cells, since it is known from elemental depth profiling (secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS)) that sodium tends to aggregate at the back contact interface [
14,
15]. With SIMS measurements on a similar set of samples, we found a decrease of the sodium aggregation at the molybdenum-CIGSe interface after damp heat treatment [
15]. Since water is necessary for the described corrosion mechanism, we observe it in the samples treated with damp heat, but not in the samples treated with dry heat. As the polyimide substrate is permeable to water [
16], the ingress from the back side of the cell is another possible path for the water to enter the cell besides the top (window layer) surface. The columnar structure of the molybdenum layer (resulting from the columnar growth during the sputter process) might even provide capillary-like channels for the water to propagate.
Literature suggests that only well-defined molybdenum-CIGSe interfaces with an intermediate MoSe
layer [
17] result in good ohmic contacts [
18]. A partially corroded back-contact (interface) will then presumably exhibit a significantly increased (contact) resistance. The partial corrosion of the back contact interface then results in a lower effective interface area,
A, between molybdenum and CIGSe. Looking from this perspective, the changes in the net doping in
Figure 5(b) are an artifact from the reduced area,
A, of the model capacitor.
Figure 6 shows the change in capacitance of the two sets of samples under damp heat treatment. The samples show a decrease of the capacitance with damp heat time, consistent with our explanation. However, for the samples with sodium content A, the capacitance shows an initial increase consistent with the observation of an initially increasing efficiency. This effect could be related to water ingress into the CIGSe absorber, possibly having a positive influence on the efficiency, similar to the one of water vapor during CIGSe growth [
19]. Therefore, damp heat exposure could lead to a superposition of the enhancing effect on the absorber and the detrimental effect on the back contact, resulting in the efficiency (
Figure 2(d)) and capacitance maxima (
Figure 6) for the samples with sodium content A. For the samples with sodium content B, the back contact corrosion seems to be dominant; hence, no initial increase in efficiency or capacitance can be observed.
The idea of a dominating back contact corrosion also explains the EL data better than the reduced net doping, which should affect the absorber and, therefore, the EL signal uniformly over the whole area,
A. Certainly that would be in contradiction to the observation of localized darker areas arising in the EL images under damp heat treatment (
Figure 4). On the other hand, since the occurrence of corrosion will most likely be dominated by inhomogeneities of the water ingress resulting from, e.g., percolation behavior at grain boundaries or pinholes in the layer stack and inhomogeneities in the initial sodium distribution, the more pronounced corrosion in certain areas is consistent with our explanation. Quantitative support for our explanation is provided by the comparison of the effects of damp heat on the capacitance and the EL signal. An image analysis (measuring the two disjoint areas after defining a brightness threshold in
Figure 4(f)) yields that approximately 20% of the cell area belongs to dark spots. This estimation is rough, since it is difficult to define an appropriate threshold. However, the fraction of dark spots is well within the same order of magnitude as the change in capacitance of approximately 40% for the set of samples with sodium content B.
Figure 6.
Capacitances of the sets of samples with sodium content A and B versus time in damp heat.
Figure 6.
Capacitances of the sets of samples with sodium content A and B versus time in damp heat.
Although the effect of the back contact corrosion seems to be the main degradation mechanism in the long run for the samples in this study, our explanation does not rule out other degradation mechanisms related to the absorber itself or one of the various other layers and interfaces. Other aging mechanisms might even be present in our experiment (as hinted at by the intermediate increase in efficiency for the samples with sodium content A), but they are superimposed by the described corrosion effect.