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BRIEF RESEARCH REPORT article

Front. Phys., 12 November 2020
Sec. Optics and Photonics
Volume 8 - 2020 | https://doi.org/10.3389/fphy.2020.585707

Optoelectronic Performance Analysis of Low-Energy Proton Irradiation and Post-Thermal Annealing Effects on InGaAs Solar Cell

www.frontiersin.orgY. Zhuang1 www.frontiersin.orgA. Aierken1* www.frontiersin.orgQ. Q. Lei2,3* www.frontiersin.orgL. Fang4 www.frontiersin.orgX. B. Shen2,3 www.frontiersin.orgM. Heini2,3 www.frontiersin.orgQ. Guo2,3 www.frontiersin.orgJ. Guo1 www.frontiersin.orgX. Yang1 www.frontiersin.orgJ. H. Mo1 www.frontiersin.orgR. K. Fan1 www.frontiersin.orgJ. Li1 www.frontiersin.orgQ. Y. Chen1 www.frontiersin.orgS. Y. Zhang1
  • 1School of Energy and Environment Science, Yunnan Normal University, Kunming, China
  • 2Xinjiang Key Laboratory of Electronic Information Materials and Devices, Xinjiang Technical Institute of Physics and Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Urumqi, China
  • 3Key Laboratory of Functional Materials and Devices for Special Environments of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xinjiang Technical Institute of Physics and Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Urumqi, China
  • 4Uniwatt Technology Co. Ltd., Zhongshan, China

The electrical and spectral properties of 150 KeV proton-irradiated MBE-grown In0.53Ga0.47As single junction solar cell and its post-thermal annealing properties were investigated. Both simulation and experimental methods were applied to analyze the irradiation-induced displacement damage and degradation mechanism of cell performance. The results show that most protons would penetrate through the In0.53Ga0.47As emitter and stop in the base region, causing differing extents of electric and spectral degredation. When proton fluence were 1 × 1012 and 5 × 1012 p/cm2, the remaining factor of Isc, Voc, Pmax, and FF were degraded to 0.790, 0.767, 0.558, 0.921 and 0.697, 0.500, 0.285, 0.817, respectively. Severer degradation was found in short wave lengths compared to long wave lengths of the solar cell spectral response. After annealing treatments, the normalized Isc, Voc, Pmax, and FF, significantly recovered from 0.697, 0.500, 0.285, and 0.817 to 0.782, 0.700, 0.499, and 0.912 (fluence: 5 × 1012 p/cm2), and the irradiation-induced defects in the whole emission area and part of the base area were annihilated, so the observed recovery of the short wavelength of the solar cell was greater than the long wavelength. The performance analysis in this work provided valuable ways to improve the photoelectric efficiency of space solar cells.

Introduction

Ⅲ-Ⅴ-based multi-junction solar cells as a direct energy provider are currently used for different space applications; radiation resistance of the solar cell will directly determine the service life of spacecraft and satellites. In order to accomplish extremely tough and long-term space missions, it is important to develop space solar cells with excellent radiation resistance and high conversion efficiency and stability. Over the past ten years, lattice-matched GaInP/GaAs/Ge three-junction solar cells with relatively high efficiency (η ≈ 30%, in AM0, 1sun) compared to Si cells have been used as the main power source for space applications. However, the fact that sub-cells of this type of three-junction solar cells are not optimized for solar spectrum hindered the further improvement of photoelectric conversion efficiency [13]. So, current researchers are attempting to further improve the efficiency by selecting dilute nitride materials as the other sub-cell incorporated into the three-junction cell to obtain the GaInP(1.9 eV)/GaAs(1.4 eV)/Ga(In)NAs(Sb) (1.04 eV)/Ge (0.67 eV) four-junction solar cell [4, 5] in different forms, such as wafer bonding solar cells [6], upright metamorphic solar cells [7, 8], and inverted metamorphic solar cells (IMM) [9]. At present, the GaInP/GaAs//InGaAsP/InGaAs four-junction solar cell fabricated by using the wafer bonding technique not only fixed the lattice mismatch issue of multi-junction solar cells, but also obtained high photoelectric conversion efficiency compared to other new-type cells, and so is expected to become the main direction for developing the next generation of space solar cells [10, 11].

There are already many studies about the electrical properties of both InGaAs-based single and multi-junction solar cells. However, the radiation effects for InGaAs sub-cell of GaInP/GaAs//InGaAsP/InGaAs full spectra four-junction solar cells are still limited. Dai et al. [12] studied the 1 MeV electron irradiation effects of wafer bounded GaInP/GaAs//InGaAsP/InGaAs four-junction solar cells and revealed that the degradation of each InGaAs sub-cell and InGaAsP sub-cell are mainly responsible for the deterioration of overall performance. Walters et al. [13] studied the 1 MeV electron-irradiated In0.53Ga0.47As solar cell and found that electron irradiation would induce two trapping centers for the majority carrier, causing degradation of the cell performance. Karlina et al. [14] investigated the 3/10 MeV proton and 1 MeV electron radiation effects of InP/InGaAs solar cells and indicated that InGaAs is an optimum candidate for InP/InGaAs triple-junction solar cells to improve the efficiency. In our previous work, the radiation damage of 3 MeV electron and 1 MeV proton-irradiated In0.53Ga0.47As single cells was well studied and we concluded that the major degradation of spectral response (EQE) usually occurs in the long wave region [15].

Many scholars investigated the effects of proton irradiation with varying energy levels on Ⅲ-Ⅴ multi-junction solar cells, and concluded that the degradation caused by low-energy protons is more serious than high-energy protons [2, 1618]. At present, there is no report about InGaAs sub-cells subjected to low-energy proton irradiation, especially InGaAs sub-cell designed for GaInP/GaAs//InGaAsP/InGaAs four-junction wafer bonded solar cell. So, the low-energy proton irradiated degradation mechanism of this type of solar cell is still unclear. Moreover, space solar cells work at a temperature range of –160∼200°C in mission [19, 20]. When the temperature is high enough, solar cells may be annealed. Therefore, the annealing process of solar cells is an important factor that cannot be ignored. In addition, a special feature of the GaAs solar cells found in early research is their ability to recover from radiation damage by annealing at relatively low temperatures under 200°C [21]. So, the annealing effect on InGaAs sub-cells after low-energy proton irradiation is studied in this work, and the annealing temperature is selected as 150°C. Research in this article is part of our ongoing project. The degradation properties of the main solar cell parameters for 150 KeV low-energy proton-irradiated In0.53Ga0.47As single junction solar cells have been clearly discussed and the physical mechanism was well investigated. Moreover, the performance recovery of irradiated In0.53Ga0.47As under different annealing conditions is also discussed. Our experiments could provide evidence for the proper design of annealing cycles for space missions to enhance the performance of solar cells in space.

Experimental Details

In0.53Ga0.47As single junction solar cell was investigated in this work and its detailed structure is shown in Figure 1A. The cell was grown on a 350-μm-thick p-InP substrate by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) system, and has a 3-μm-thick base layer with a doping concentration of 1 × 1017 cm−3 and a 200-nm-thick emitter layer with a 1 × 1018 cm−3 doping concentration. Si and Be were used as the n-type and p-type doping source, respectively. A detailed description for the growth and fabrication process of this solar cell has been reported in our previous work [15]. All tested samples are 2.5 × 2.5 mm2 in size and have an initial conversion efficiency of around 11% under the standard AM0 spectra (136.7 mW/cm2 at 25°C). The 150 KeV proton irradiation experiments were conducted at room temperature with uniform flux, and the total dose was 1.0 × 1012 and 5.0 × 1012 p/cm2 for comparison. After proton irradiation, thermal annealing treatments at 150°C for 20, 60, 120, 180, and 360 min were carried out.

FIGURE 1
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FIGURE 1. Structure representative of (A) InGaAs sub-cells studied in this work; SRIM simulation results of (A) 150 KeV proton (number of 105) trajectories and (B) calculated vacancy densities in In0.53Ga0.47As sub-cells.

Results and Discussion

Simulation Results

In order to understand proton irradiation-induced displacement damage distribution in In0.53Ga0.47As sub-cells, the SRIM (Stopping and Range of ions in Matter) program was utilized to simulate the trajectories of 105 incident protons. Figure 1B,C show the trajectories of 150 KeV protons and the corresponding irradiation-induced vacancy densities in In0.53Ga0.47As sub-cells. Results gathered from the simulation indicate that the maximum penetration depth would be at 1.36 µm below the implantation surface, with peak damage occurring at around 1.0 µm, which illustrates that most protons could penetrate through InGaAs emitter region but stop in the base range. This also proves that the proton energy of 150 keV meets the requirement for our experiments.

Degradation of Electric and Spectral Properties

Figure 2A shows the I-V characteristics of the In0.53Ga0.47As solar cell before and after proton irradiation with different proton fluence. The basic electrical parameters of solar cells, such as the short-circuit current (Isc), open-circuit voltage (Voc), fill factor (FF), and maximum output power (Pmax), could be directly derived from the I-V curve. Other parameters, like photo-generated current (Iph), saturation current (I0), shunt resistance (Rsh), series resistance (Rs), and diode ideal factor (n), could be extracted from the I-V curves using a theoretical model [22]. The symbols shown in Figure 2A are fitted results and their values are listed in Table 1, which were obtained based on the equivalent circuit method described as the following expression:

I=IphI0[exp(v+IRSnVT)]v+IRSRSH(1)

where VT is the thermal voltage. It should be noticed from Figure 2A that extracted results by theoretical model are highly consistent with the experimental results. The results show that I0 and Rs increased with the increasing proton fluence and Rsh and Iph decreased conversely.

FIGURE 2
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FIGURE 2. 150 KeV proton with different fluence-irradiated In0.53Ga0.47As solar cells' (A) I-V characteristics, solid lines are experimental curves and the theoretical values are denoted by hollow symbols, (B) the remaining factor of electrical parameters, and (C) EQE spectra.

TABLE 1
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TABLE 1. Extracted parameters of In0.53Ga0.47As solar cells from I-V curves.

Changes in the remaining factor of Isc, Voc, Pmax, and FF of In0.53Ga0.47As solar cells before and after differing proton fluence irradiation levels are shown in the curves of Figure 2B. When proton fluence was 1 × 1012 and 5 × 1012 p/cm2, the remaining factor of Isc, Voc, Pmax, and FF were 0.790, 0.767, 0.558, 0.921, and 0.697, 0.500, 0.285, 0.817, respectively. All of them degraded seriously when the proton fluence increased, and the Pmax was the most degraded.

The displacement damage caused by proton irradiation is mainly responsible for the degradation of In0.53Ga0.47As solar cells’ performance and electrical parameters. When solar cells are under proton irradiation, the incident proton interacted with atoms on the pristine lattice position and transferred energy to the atoms by elastic or inelastic collisions, which removed atoms from their initial position, causing large amounts of defects [23, 24]. These irradiation-induced defects introduced five types of new charge-trapping defect levels into the forbidden band, as shown in Figure 3. The first mechanism is carrier generation (labeled Ⅰ), which generates electron-hole pairs assisted by thermal excitation of deep-level defects. Recombination (labeled Ⅱ) occurs when it is suitable for electron-hole pairs to recombine at the defect sites, and this type of defect usually reduced the minority carrier life. Trapping (labeled Ⅲ) happens when a carrier is captured by the defect level and emitted to the origin site before recombination or other processes occur. Compensation (labeled Ⅳ) occurs when the defect level obtains the free carriers from dopant atoms. The type of defect level Ⅳ could reduce the amount of the majority charge carrier. The last influence of defect level is tunneling (labeled Ⅴ), where carriers can get through the depletion region through trap-assisted tunneling.

FIGURE 3
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FIGURE 3. Schematic diagram of irradiation-induced defect levels in band structure.

The degradation of Isc is mainly due to the displacement damage defects induced by proton irradiation in the active region of solar cells. There are two main mechanisms that cause the degradation of solar cell performance. First, the displacement damage generates non-irradiative recombination centers (defect level Ⅱ in Figure 3) in the band gap to reduce the minority carrier diffusion length, and consequently decreases the collection efficiency of photo-generated carriers. The change of minority carrier diffusion length with respect to the proton irradiation flux can be expressed by the following equation [25]:

1Lϕ2=1L02+KLϕ(2)

where L0 and Lφ are the diffusion lengths of minority carriers before and after irradiation, and KL and φ are the damage coefficient and the proton irradiation fluence. Equation 2 reveals that Lφ decreases with increasing proton irradiation fluence. Second, the carrier removal effect (defect level Ⅲ and Ⅳ in Figure 3) caused by displacement damage is also an important factor resulting in the deduction of Isc. The carrier removal effect would reduce the majority carrier concentration in emission and base regions and weaken the built-in electric field, so as to affect the collection of photo-generated carriers. The correlation between the built-in electric field and majority carrier concentration can been expressed as below:

VDKBTqln(nn0pp0ni2)(3)

where nn0 and pp0 are the majority carrier concentrations of emitter and base, T is the temperature, KB is the Boltzmann constant, and ni is the intrinsic carrier concentration. It can be seen from Eq. 3 that the concentration decreased after irradiation and reduced the built-in electric field, consequently lowering the collecting efficiency of photo-generated carriers. The carrier removal effect, which reduced the majority carrier concentration, increased the series resistance Rs of solar cells [26]. Therefore, the Rs increased with increasing proton fluence. The fact that Voc decreased after proton irradiation can be explained by the following equations [27]:

VOC=KBTqln(IphI0+1)(4)
I0JS=qDnnp0Ln+qDppn0Lp(5)

where I0 is the reverse saturation current and is proportional to the reverse saturation current density JS, Iph is the photo current, Ln is the minority carrier diffusion length in p-type base region, and Lp is the minority carrier diffusion length in the n-type emitter region. The variation of the Voc is mainly influenced by I0 and Iph; both the decrease of Isc and the increase of I0 would lead to the degradation of Voc. From the above analysis, it can be seen that the displacement damage defect caused by proton irradiation in the active area of In0.53Ga0.47As solar cells combined with the carrier removal effect in emission and base regions leads to the total degradation of Isc. I0 decreases and Rsh increases with the increase of proton irradiation doses. Proton irradiation produces a large number of defects in the junction region of the solar cell, which induce additional deep level defects and increase the recombination rate of electrons and holes at both sides of the junction region, and, as a result, increase the leakage current of the solar cell and decrease the I0 and Rsh at the same time. Therefore, the change of Isc and I0 is mainly responsible for the degradation of Voc. In addition, Figure 2A and Table 1 show that the FF decreased after proton irradiation due to the decrease of Isc and Voc. Finally, the degradation of Voc, Isc, and FF results in the reduction of Pmax, which can be described as Pmax = FF × Isc × Voc.

The EQE spectra of 150 KeV proton-irradiated In0.53Ga0.47As solar cells is shown Figure 2C. It can be seen that EQE degraded with the increase of proton irradiation fluence, and the degradation mainly occurred in the short-middle wavelength range. The degradation of the EQE spectral response of solar cells reveals the displacement damage located in different regions, i.e. the displacement damage of the solar cell’s emission and base region will lead to the degradation of the short-wavelength and long-wavelength of the EQE spectrum, respectively [17]. According to SRIM simulation results presented in Simulation Results, protons are mainly deposited in the whole emission, junction region, and part of the base region. Therefore, 150 KeV proton irradiation has caused displacement damage concentrated upon the whole emission region and junction region, and, consequently, more obvious degradation of EQE spectra occurs in the short-middle wavelength range.

Thermal Annealing of Proton Irradiated In0.53Ga0.47As

Thermal annealing experiments were then carried out on In0.53Ga0.47As single junction solar cells irradiated by 150 KeV proton with doses of 5 × 1012 p/cm2; the annealing temperature was set to 150°C. For the purpose of evaluating the influence of annealing time, the duration of annealing was set to 20, 60, 120, 180, and 360 min. Figure 4 shows the variation of electrical parameters for irradiated In0.53Ga0.47As sub-cells after different annealing times. The I-V characteristic curves in Figure 4A reveal the significant recovery that occurred after annealing for 20 min, but there is no substantial recovery in continuous annealing up to 360 min. It should be noticed from Figure 4B that the electrical parameters, such as normalized Voc, Isc, Pmax, and FF, significantly recovered after annealing for 360 min, changing from 0.5, 0.697, 0.285, and 0.817 to 0.7, 0.782, 0.499, and 0.912, respectively. Figure 4C shows the degree of cell recovery as a function of annealing time in terms of the EQE. Obvious recovery occurred at 20 min and was maintained at around the same level during the longer annealing processing. After annealing at 150°C for 360 min, the EQE of In0.53Ga0.47As solar cells recovered by 7.96% and 1.15% at 1050 and 1500 nm wavelengths, respectively. Therefore, the recovery degree of the spectral response of In0.53Ga0.47As solar cells in the short wave region is greater than that in the long wave region after annealing.

FIGURE 4
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FIGURE 4. The variation of electrical parameters (A) I-V curve and (B) normalized Voc, Isc, Pmax, and FF, and the variation of (C) EQE of the solar cell of In0.53Ga0.47As solar cells after annealing at 150°C for different times.

After annealing at 150°C, the performance of In0.53Ga0.47As solar cells irradiated by protons was obviously restored. There are two possible reasons for this phenomena. First, during the annealing process, a large number of carriers are generated inside the In0.53Ga0.47As solar cell, which induce a “carrier injection annealing effect”, and some proton irradiation-induced defects were annihilated. This consequently increased the minority carrier life and the performance of the In0.53Ga0.47As solar cell could be restored [2830]. Second, 150 KeV proton irradiation produced a large number of displacement damage defects in the In0.53Ga0.47As solar cell; some studies showed that thermal annealing can remove some of these displacement damage defects [31] and reduce the number of defects and recombination centers to improve the In0.53Ga0.47As solar cell’s electrical and optical properties. In our work, when the In0.53Ga0.47As solar cell was annealed at 150°C, a part of the sub-stable displacement damage caused by proton irradiation was annihilated, which resulted in a degree of recovery in cell performance. And the short wavelength recovery of EQE spectrum was more obvious than in the long wavelength. By integrating the SRIM simulation results, which showed that the damage caused by proton irradiation in the solar cell emission area was greater than in the base area, it can be seen that the degradation of the short wavelength of the solar cell spectral response was more serious. After annealing, the defects induced by proton irradiation in the whole emission area and part of the base area were annihilated, so the recovered degree of the short wavelength of the solar cell was greater than in the long wavelength.

Conclusion

In the present article, In0.53Ga0.47As single junction solar cells were subjected to 150 KeV proton radiation with different fluence. In order to understand low-energy proton irradiation-induced displacement damage distribution in In0.53Ga0.47As single junction solar cells, SRIM simulations were firstly carried out to simulate the trajectories of 105 incident protons and the induced trap density. And the corresponding electrical and spectral properties after irradiation were well characterized by experimental means. The sequential annealing process from 20 to 360 min were then implemented to reveal the recovery of cell performance correlated with the thermal annealing treatments. The results show that most protons would penetrate through InGaAs emitter and stop in InGaAs base region, causing differing extents of electric and spectral degradation. When proton fluence was 1 × 1012 and 5 × 1012 p/cm2, the remaining factor of Isc, Voc, Pmax, and FF were degraded to 0.790, 0.767, 0.558, 0.921 and 0.697, 0.500, 0.285, 0.817, respectively. Severer degradation of short wave lengths then long wave lengths of the solar cell spectral response was observed. After annealing for different time at 150°C, it was shown that significant recovery of cell performance occurred after annealing for 20 min, and there is no obvious substantial recovery in continuous annealing up to 360 min. And the recovered degree of the short wavelength of the solar cell was greater than in the long wavelength, which reveals the fact that the defects induced by proton irradiation in the whole emission area and part of the base area were annihilated. Our performance analysis could provide evidence for the proper design of annealing cycles for space missions to enhance the performance of solar cells in space.

Data Availability Statement

The data that supports the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.

Author Contributions

YZ, AA, and QL designed the research, conducted the experiments and wrote this manuscript. All authors contributed to the discussion of the results and edited the manuscript.

Conflict of Interest

Author LF was employed by the company Uniwatt Technology Co. Ltd. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by Basic Research Foundation of Yunnan Province(Grant number: 202001AU070090), a key project of the Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant number: 61534008), and Doctoral Start-up Funding of Yunnan Normal University (Gran number: 2019XJLK05/01700205020503040).

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Keywords: InGaAs solar cell, proton irradiation, displacement damage, degradation, annealing

Citation: Zhuang Y, Aierken A, Lei QQ, Fang L, Shen XB, Heini M, Guo Q, Guo J, Yang X, Mo JH, Fan RK, Li J, Chen QY and Zhang SY (2020) Optoelectronic Performance Analysis of Low-Energy Proton Irradiation and Post-Thermal Annealing Effects on InGaAs Solar Cell. Front. Phys. 8:585707. doi: 10.3389/fphy.2020.585707

Received: 21 July 2020; Accepted: 15 September 2020;
Published: 12 November 2020.

Edited by:

Zichuan Yi, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, China

Reviewed by:

Yang Tong, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (DOE), United States
Wang Xin, South China Normal University, China

Copyright © 2020 Zhuang, Aierken, Lei, Fang, Shen, Heini, Guo, Guo, Yang, Mo, Fan, Li, Chen and Zhang. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: A. Aierken, erkin@ynnu.edu.cn Q. Q. Lei, 1243642152@qq.com

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