Photovoltaic measurements in single-nanowire silicon solar cells.

Single-nanowire solar cells were created by forming rectifying junctions in electrically contacted vapor-liquid-solid-grown Si nanowires. The nanowires had diameters in the range of 200 nm to 1.5 microm. Dark and light current-voltage measurements were made under simulated Air Mass 1.5 global illumination. Photovoltaic spectral response measurements were also performed. Scanning photocurrent microscopy indicated that the Si nanowire devices had minority carrier diffusion lengths of approximately 2 microm. Assuming bulk-dominated recombination, this value corresponds to a minimum carrier lifetime of approximately 15 ns, or assuming surface-dominated recombination, to a maximum surface recombination velocity of approximately 1350 cm s(-1). The methods described herein comprise a valuable platform for measuring the properties of semiconductor nanowires, and are expected to be instrumental when designing an efficient macroscopic solar cell based on arrays of such nanostructures.

[1]  L. Lauhon,et al.  Measurement of Minority Carrier Diffusion Lengths in Semiconductor Nanowires , 2006, 2006 64th Device Research Conference.

[2]  K. Chang,et al.  Optical Properties of SiC , 1993 .

[3]  R. Rosenfeld Nature , 2009, Otolaryngology--head and neck surgery : official journal of American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery.

[4]  John Romankiewicz,et al.  Quantitative characterization of carrier transport in nanowire photodetectors , 2007, SPIE OPTO.

[5]  H. Grubin The physics of semiconductor devices , 1979, IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics.