A new technique for measuring minority carrier lifetimes in p-i-n device configurations, and is used to measure the effective hole lifetimes in nanocrystalline silicon materials. The technique is the reverse-recovery transient method. A forward current in a p-n junction is suddenly switched, and a high constant reverse current flows for a certain period of time. This time is related to the time the injected minority carriers take to recombine in the base. The technique allows for analysis of hole lifetimes in typical thin film nanocrystalline silicon device with very common testing equipment.;The samples used for testing were fabricated using VHF-PECVD reactors using silane and hydrogen as source gases. Both hydrogen profiled nanocrystallin...