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Methodology for vetting heavily doped semiconductors for intermediate band photovoltaics: A case study in sulfur-hyperdoped silicon

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2013

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AIP Publishing
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Sullivan, J. T., C. B. Simmons, J. J. Krich, A. J. Akey, D. Recht, M. J. Aziz, and T. Buonassisi. 2013. “Methodology for Vetting Heavily Doped Semiconductors for Intermediate Band Photovoltaics: A Case Study in Sulfur-Hyperdoped Silicon.” Journal of Applied Physics 114 (10): 103701. doi:10.1063/1.4820454.

Abstract

We present a methodology for estimating the efficiency potential for candidate impurity-band photovoltaic materials from empirical measurements. This methodology employs both Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and low-temperature photoconductivity to calculate a “performance figure of merit” and to determine both the position and bandwidth of the impurity band. We evaluate a candidate impurity-band material, silicon hyperdoped with sulfur; we find that the figure of merit is more than one order of magnitude too low for photovoltaic devices that exceed the thermodynamic efficiency limit for single band gap materials.

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Photoconductivity, Silicon, Photons, Doping, Conduction bands

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