Roles of Low Temperature Sputtered Indium Tin Oxide for Solar Photovoltaic Technology
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Abstract
Different functionalities of materials based on indium tin oxide and fabricated at soft
conditions were investigated with the goal of being used in a next generation of solar photovoltaic
devices. These thin films were fabricated in a commercial UNIVEX 450B magnetron sputtering.
The first studied functionality consisted of an effective n-type doped layer in an n-p heterojunction
based on p-type crystalline silicon. At this point, the impact of the ITO film thickness (varied from
45 to 140 nm) and the substrate temperature (varied from room temperature to 250 ◦C) on the
heterojunction parameters was evaluated separately. To avoid possible damages in the heterojunction
interface, the applied ITO power was purposely set as low as 25 W; and to minimize the energy
consumption, no heat treatment process was used. The second functionality consisted of indiumsaving transparent conductive multicomponent materials for full spectrum applications. This was
carried out by the doping of the ITO matrix with transition metals, as titanium and zinc. This action
can reduce the production cost without sacrificing the optoelectronic film properties. The morphology,
chemical, structural nature and optoelectronic properties were evaluated as function of the doping
concentrations. The results revealed low manufactured and suitable films used successfully as
conventional emitter, and near-infrared extended transparent conductive materials with superior
performance that conventional ones, useful for full spectrum applications. Both can open interesting
choices for cost-effective photovoltaic technologies.

