Fulton Undergraduate Research Initiative (FURI) Program
On Friday April 12, students in the Fulton Undergraduate Research Initiative (FURI) program presented their semester projects. QESST was well represented, six QESST Scholars presented their work. Five of these scholars participated in Testbed 1 the Student Led Pilotline. Dr. Stuart Bowden is the supervisor of the pilot line and he was assisted by two FURI alums who are now QESST graduate students, Guy Picket and Tim Reblitz. Also assisting with these projects is Katherine Nelson, Kunal Ghosh, and Stas Herasimenka. The sixth student, Joe Carpenter, was supervised by Terry Alford, Professor in the School of Engineering, Matter, Transport and Energy.
Sebastian Husein, Materials Science and Engineering (Featured here, describing his work to Ira Fulton)
PROFILE MAPPING OF PHOSPHOROUS-DOPED SILICON SOLAR CELL EMITTER LAYERS
Mentor: Stuart Bowden, associate research professor, School of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering
Research Theme: Energy
Solar cells have garnered much attention as a viable replacement for fossil fuels. To truly compete with current energy sources however, solar cells must achieve much higher working efficiencies. One barrier to obtaining this is reduced absorption of light in the blue wavelength range as caused by phosphorous concentrations in the emitter layer. Electrochemical Capacitance-Voltage (ECV) profiling is used to characterize the emitter layer to gain an understanding of how to fine-tune the phosphorous concentrations to a more desirable gradient which leads to efficiency gains in silicon solar cells.
Joe Carpenter, Chemical Engineering
DEVELOPMENT OF Y-DOPED ZNO THIN FILMS VIA NOVEL INKJET PRINTING TECHNIQUE
Mentor: Terry Alford, professor, School for Engineering of Matter, Transport and Energy
Research Theme: Security
Yttrium-doped zinc oxide (YZO) is a new n-type semiconductor with electrical properties compatible with channel layers in thin-film transistors. This could make up the display in a smart-phone or a crucial part of a transparent solar cell. Inkjet printing techniques were used to deposit the YZO films on glass substrate. The thickness of each layer is around 15 nm. The five-layered YZO films had RMS roughness of 7 nm and had lower transparency in the 550-900 nm range than the three layered YZO films, which had RMS roughness of 3.69 nm. The resistivity of the films is 0.144Ω-cm.
Yan Chen, Mechanical Engineering/Computer Systems Engineering
OPTIMIZATION OF POCL3 DIFFUSION IN SOLAR CELL PRODUCTION
Mentor: Stuart Bowden, associate research professor, School of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering
Research Theme: Energy
Phosphorus oxychloride (POCl3) diffusion is a crucial process in solar cell production. During diffusion, the wafers are placed into a high-temp furnace tube that flows N2, POCl3 and O2. The result is the formation of the PN junction. The optimization of POCl3 diffusion involves cross-boat consistency, shifting of diffusion profiles and improving blue response. Recipes with cross-boat uniformity and techniques in shifting diffusion profiles have been developed leading to improved blue response and cell efficiency. Further optimization will tailor the POCl3 diffusion for a recently developed enhanced silicon nitride deposition and lead to cell efficiencies over 18 percent.
Javier Corral, Chemical Engineering
Graduation: May 2015
BORON DIFFUSION
Mentor: Stuart Bowden, associate research professor, School of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering
Research Theme: Energy
The research topic deals with how to develop more effective ways to etch diffused boron on negative-type silicon wafers. Silicon etching using hydrofluoric-nitric-acetic acid solutions with varying HF concentrations had been employed to determine the ideal etching rate to achieve more efficient photovoltaic cells. Dry etching using nitrogen trifluoride had also been used to analyze possible benefits over wet silicon etching. In the future, purple etch (KMnO4) solution should be used to analyze possible benefits compared with HNA and NF3 etching.
Tasnuva Rahman, Electrical Engineering
Graduation: May 2014
Hometown: Dhaka, Bangladesh
STUDENT-LED PILOT LINE FOR MANUFACTURING SOLAR CELLS
Mentor: Stuart Bowden, associate research professor, School of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering
Research Themes: Energy, Education
Solar energy is a clean and renewable form of energy that has potential to become the major source of energy. Research is being carried out to determine the characteristics that may affect the efficiency of solar cells in order to make solar cells efficient enough that the price for the amount of energy is reasonable for it to become a major source of energy. The student-led pilot line at ASU trains students in the process of manufacturing cells. A website PVCDROM has been designed with background information and videos of manufacturing steps. Future work includes interviewing students to observe the effectiveness of this design.
Chikara Kakizawa, Electrical Engineering
SIMULATION OF SOLAR CELL USING PSPICE
Mentor: Stuart Bowden, associate research professor, School of Electrical, Computing and Energy Engineering
Research Theme: Energy
Simulating a solar cell using computer modeling is beneficial when calculating the theoretical output of a product before manufacturing. Frequently, a single diode model is used to understand the characteristics, but a more accurate result can be achieved by a distributed model, where the cell is broken down into smaller components. This research examines the difference between the two by modeling a solar cell fabricated at the Solar Power Lab.