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Águas, H.a, Mateus Vicente Gaspar Mendes Schmidt Pereira Fortunato Martins T. a A. a. "Thin Film Silicon Photovoltaic Cells on Paper for Flexible Indoor Applications." Advanced Functional Materials (2015). AbstractWebsite

The present development of non-wafer-based photovoltaics (PV) allows supporting thin film solar cells on a wide variety of low-cost recyclable and flexible substrates such as paper, thereby extending PV to a broad range of consumer-oriented disposable applications where autonomous energy harvesting is a bottleneck issue. However, their fibrous structure makes it challenging to fabricate good-performing inorganic PV devices on such substrates. The advances presented here demonstrate the viability of fabricating thin film silicon PV cells on paper coated with a hydrophilic mesoporous layer. Such layer can not only withstand the cells production temperature (150 °C), but also provide adequate paper sealing and surface finishing for the cell's layers deposition. The substances released from the paper substrate are continuously monitored during the cell deposition by mass spectrometry, which allows adapting the procedures to mitigate any contamination from the substrate. In this way, a proof-of-concept solar cell with 3.4% cell efficiency (41% fill factor, 0.82 V open-circuit voltage and 10.2 mA cm-2 short-circuit current density) is attained, opening the door to the use of paper as a reliable substrate to fabricate inorganic PV cells for a plethora of indoor applications with tremendous impact in multi-sectorial fields such as food, pharmacy and security. © 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

Águas, H., Cabrita Tonello Nunes Fortunato Martins A. P. P. "Two step process for the growth of a thin layer of silicon dioxide for tunnelling effect applications." Materials Research Society Symposium - Proceedings. Vol. 619. 2000. 179-184. Abstract

In today's main crystalline silicon (c-Si) applications in MOS (metal-oxide-silicon), MIS (metal-insulator-semiconductor) or SIS (Semiconductor-Insulator-Semiconductor), the growing of the oxide layer plays the main role, dictating the device performances, in particular if it has to be grown by a low temperature process. Of fundamental importance is the SiO2 interface with the c-Si. A very low defect density interface is desirable so that the number of trapping states can be reduced and the devices performance optimised. A two step low temperature oxidation process is proposed. The process consists of growing first a layer of oxide by a wet process and then treating the grown oxide with an oxygen plasma. The oxygen ions from the plasma bombard the oxide causing compaction of the oxide and a decrease in the interface roughness and defect density. Infrared spectroscopy and spectroscopic ellipsometry measurements were performed on the samples to determine the oxide thickness, optical and structural properties. SIS structures were built and capacitance measurements were performed under dark and illuminated conditions from which were inferred the interface defect density and correlated with the oxide growth process.