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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 February 2011
Poly-Si thin films deposited at low temperature by using the metal-induced growth (MIG) method have the advantage of less metal impurity contaminations and relative large grains with preferred crystal orientation of (220). In recent research, the Schottky solar diode made of MIG poly-Si shows Jsc of 12 mA/cm2 and Voc of 0.214V. In this paper, current transport mechanisms were studied by current-voltage-temperature (I-V-T) testing from 100 K to 400K. For the samples deposited by a one-step sputtering process, the large value of ideality factor (n) and abnormal increase of barrier height with the temperature implies that the current transport mechanism does not follow the pure thermionic-emission theory, which was proven to be thermionic-field emission due to the highly doped Si film. By using a two-step sputtering process, the ideality factor and Au-Schottky barrier height at room temperature were about 1.5 and 0.7 eV, which was improved from one-step sputtering. Hydrogenation by electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) plasma can further improve the Schottky diode ideality factor and barrier height. Although a low-level Phosphors-doped Si target was used for poly-Si thin film deposition, a thermionic-field emission mechanism was still found by plotting the activation energy (E0) versus the testing temperature range. Capacitance-voltage (C-V) analysis revealed an unexpected carrier density of 1017 cm−3 level, which is 1000 times higher than the doping density level in the Si film. “Oxygen thermal donor” effect was assumed due to high oxygen level (1020 cm−3) detected by SIMS and processing at ∼ 600 °C. Increasing of the total carrier density due to the oxygen donor may cause the transport mechanism change from pure thermionic emission to thermionic-field emission. Reducing oxygen in the Si film by filtering the sputtering gas to 50 ppb oxygen level was proven to be effective. C-V results gave ∼1016 cm−3 level of carrier density after using oxygen filtering. P-N junction solar cells were made by B-ion implantation into n-type Si film and dopant activation at 700 °C. I-V-T study showed similar curves for P-N junction as for Schottky junction devices. This implies that the current transport was dominated by the Si films instead of the junctions for both Schottky and P-N junction devices.