Efficient Wave Optics Modeling of Nanowire Solar Cells Using Rigorous Coupled Wave Analysis
Abstract
We investigate the accuracy of rigorous coupled wave analysis (RCWA) for
near-field computations within cylindrical GaAs nanowire solar cells and
discover excellent accuracy with low computational cost at long incident
wavelengths, but poor accuracy at short incident wavelengths. These near fields
give the carrier generation rate, and their accurate determination is essential
for device modeling. We implement two techniques for increasing the accuracy of
the near fields generated by RCWA, and give some guidance on parameters
required for convergence along with an estimate of their associated computation
times. The first improvement removes Gibbs phenomenon artifacts from the RCWA
fields, and the second uses the extremely well-converged far field absorption
to rescale the local fields. These improvements allow a computational speedup
between 30 and 1000 times for spectrally integrated calculations, depending on
the density of the near fields desired. Some spectrally resolved quantities,
especially at short wavelengths, remain expensive, but RCWA is still an
excellent method for performing those calculations. These improvements open up
the possibility of using RCWA for low cost optical modeling in a full
optoelectronic device model of nanowire solar cells.