The invention relates to scattering and conductive anti-reflective surfaces, and in particular surfaces made on a substrate and comprising a transparent conductive electrode.
Such surfaces are commonly found, for example, in photovoltaic optical components, photodetectors, devices to generate light from electrical excitation, and electrochromic devices. The transparent electrode is used for its electrical conduction properties, and the transparent substrate for mechanical strength and protection of the device.
The transparent substrate is generally made of glass, such as borosilicate or soda-lime glass, or of flexible polymer-type substrates. The transparent electrode is frequently made of transparent conductive oxide such as doped indium oxide, doped zinc oxide, or doped tin oxide.
Refractive index transitions between the different components of an optical device cause light reflections, which reduce the performance of the device and change its appearance.
A known solution to reduce reflection is to texture the interfaces between the different components. Texturing the surface of the substrate on which the electrode is formed reduces reflection at the interface between the electrode and the substrate.
By texturing the other surface of the substrate, reflection at the interface between the substrate and the incident environment is reduced.
A method for texturing one surface of the glass forming an glass/air interface is notably described in the document “Optimal Moth Eye Nanostructure Array on Transparent Glass Towards Broadband Antireflection”, published by Seungmuk Ji et al, in the journal ACS Applied Material Interfaces, in 2013, 5, pages 10731-10737. According to this method, the glass is masked according to a pattern and then partially etched according to this pattern in order to obtain a regular texture.
The document ‘Antireflective grassy surface on glass substrates with self-masked dry etching’, published by M. Song et al, in Nanoscale Research Letters 2013, 8:505, describes a method for texturing one surface of the glass to form a glass/air interface. This method is based on dry etching, namely reactive ion etching in a CF4/O2 mixture, and simplifies the fabrication method by avoiding the use of masks.
The document ‘SF6/Ar Plasma textured periodic glass surface morphologies with high transmittance and haze ratio of ITO:ZR films for amorphous silicon thin film solar cells’ by Hussain et al, published in Vacuum 117 pages 91 to 97, describes a method for texturing a glass sheet to obtain a scattering by TCO deposited on the formed texture. This document proposes a dry etching method through an etching mask.
The use of these texturing methods is insufficient to adequately reduce the specular reflection of the environment and the alteration of the saturation of the surface colour. Thus, specular reflection reflects the image of the environment and can create glare effects in the event of specular reflection from an intense external light source. The discretion of the surface and the comfort for the surrounding observers are thus altered.
The invention aims to solve one or more of these disadvantages. The invention thus relates to a scattering and conductive anti-reflective surface, as defined in the accompanying claims.
The invention further relates to an optical device as defined in the accompanying claims.
The invention further relates to a method for fabricating a scattering and conductive anti-reflective surface, as defined in the accompanying claims.
The invention further relates to variants of the dependent claims. The skilled person will understand that each of the features of the description or of a dependent claim can be combined independently with the features of an independent claim, without constituting an intermediate generalization.
Other features and advantages of the invention will emerge clearly from the description provided below, by way of indication and without limitation, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
A textured surface is defined as a surface with a roughness or relief relative to a smooth geometric shape.
A scattering and conductive anti-reflective surface illustrated in
The substrate 2 is for example made of borosilicate glass or soda-lime glass. The glass substrate 2 has an outer surface 21 in contact with air at an interface 20, and an inner surface 22 in contact with the electrode 3 at an interface 23. The surfaces 21 and 22 can be opposed and textured.
The transparent electrode 3 is continuous, to be able to transport electrical charges. The electrode 3 is for example made of a conductive oxide such as doped zinc oxide, doped tin oxide, or doped indium oxide. The transparent electrode can also be made of an alloy of these materials, for example ITZO. At the interface 23, the transparent electrode 3 has a surface 31 in contact with the surface 22 and of complementary shape. The transparent electrode 3 also has a surface 32, opposite to surface 31. This surface 32 is in contact with the active optical device layer 4 at an interface 34.
The surface 21 has an appropriate texturing that allows it to obtain an anti-reflective function whose residual reflection is mainly diffuse. Preferably, the texturing of the surface 21 is configured so that the proportion of diffuse reflection to total reflection is at least 20% and can reach more than 80% (
The texturing of the surface 21 will be advantageously configured so that the optical reflection at the interface 20, weighted by human spectral sensitivity, at this surface 21, is less than 3%.
The surface 22 has advantageously an appropriate texturing that allows it to limit total reflection and increase optical transmission through the superposition of the substrate 2 and of the transparent electrode 3 with a high proportion of scattering. Therefore, scattering the reflected and transmitted light avoids the reflection of the environment (anti-reflection effect, improvement of colours thanks to the reduction of the reflection of ambient light on the surface), limits the glare effects linked to the specular reflection of an intense light source, improves the efficiency of a potential device for absorbing or emitting light. Advantageously, the texturing of the surface 22 is configured so that the proportion of diffuse reflection in the total optical reflection through the superposition of the substrate 2 and the electrode 3 is controllable in a wide range.
Advantageously, the texturing of the surface 22 is configured so that the optical reflection of the superposition of the substrate 2 and the electrode 3 is less than 6.5%.
The texturing of the surface 22 is especially used to facilitate the formation of a textured electrode 3 with properties detailed hereinbelow.
According to the invention, the surface 32 (and thus the contact interface 34 between the transparent electrode 3 and a medium 4) is textured, so that the light reflected or transmitted to this interface is respectively minimized or maximized and, in this fashion, diffused.
Advantageously, the textures of the surfaces of the media 1, 2, 3 are configured so that the optical reflection of light from the media 1 is less than 6.5%.
According to the formation mode chosen for the transparent electrode 3, the geometry and the texturing of the surface 32 (and therefore of the contact interface 34) may depend on the geometry and on the texturing of the surface 22.
In particular, for a method of depositing the transparent electrode 3 on the surface 22 with certain parameters, it will be possible to partially reproduce reliefs of 30 the texturing of the surface 32 superposed on the reliefs of the texturing of the surface 22.
In order to promote the reproduction of the reliefs of the surface 22 at the surface 32 (and therefore at the interface 34) and thus to preserve a certain texturing of the surface 34, even with a reduced height level of the reliefs, the electrode 3 can be expected to have a limited thickness relative to the depth of the texturing of the surface 22, preferably limited to the value of its depth. A high aspect ratio (height-to-width ratio of the reliefs) of the surface 22 helps to preserve the texturing of the interface 34. This aspect ratio must therefore be increased for an electrode 3 of greater thickness.
In order to promote the electrical properties of the electrode 3, it is advantageously thick enough to ensure its electrical continuity around structures. In order to promote the electrical continuity of the electrode 3, it has advantageously a thickness at least equal to 25% of the texturing depth of the surface 22.
Advantageously, to favour the proportion of scattering in the reflection or transmission at the interface 34, on the one hand, and at the interface 23, on the other, the thickness of the electrode 3 is advantageously non-uniform: the thickness of the electrode 3 at the bottom of the texturing of the surface 22 is lower than its thickness at the peaks of the texturing of the surface 22.
Such substrates have made it possible to carry out a number of experiments to determine their influence on the optical or electrical parameters of a scattering and conductive anti-reflective substrate. The results of various experiments are notably illustrated in the diagrams in
A common point between the reliefs obtained by the different texturing parameters of the substrate, as illustrated in
For the example illustrated in
For the example illustrated in
For the example illustrated in
For these three texturing examples,
Different optical parameters for the examples in
The reflection value Rt on an outer surface of an untreated and untextured glass substrate is usually of the order of 8%. The Rd/Rt ratio for the same untreated and untextured glass substrate would usually be of the order of 1%.
As illustrated in
According to the intended use of the scattering and conductive anti-reflective surface, criteria on optical and/or electrical properties could be imposed. These properties depend on the texturing applied to the dielectric substrate as well as the thickness of the conductive layer.
The diagram in
The diagram in
Therefore, an electrode 3 according to the invention may have a significant thickness to promote a reduced resistance per square, without increasing optical reflection. It can also be noted that the texturing configuration of the surface 22 of the substrate 2 is the main parameter for defining the total optical reflection at the interface 23 or the interface 20.
The process for fabricating a scattering and conductive anti-reflective surface according to the invention may involve specific steps of texturing the surfaces 21 and 22 of the glass substrate 2.
In order to have a simple and inexpensive fabrication process, the texturing of the surfaces 21 and 22 of the glass substrate 2 is advantageously carried out with no specific masking step (e.g. particle spreading or photolithography) and with the same etching technology. Advantageously, the texturing of the surfaces 21 and 22 is carried out by dry etching of the plasma vacuum type. Such etching notably allows texturing to be carried out without exceeding the glass transition temperature of the glass. Advantageously, such etching is carried out for a maximum of 30 minutes.
Experimental results determined that etching parameters such as pressure, gas mixture type, polarization voltage and etching time made it possible to modify the roughness parameters of the etched surface. The roughness parameters of the etched surface can thus be modified, such as relief pitch, relief height, relief width and/or relief height/width ratio.
Experiments were thus notably carried out with the following plasma etching parameters on alumino-borosilicate type glasses (in particular glass marketed as Corning Eagle XG):
In the example illustrated in
In the example illustrated in
In the example illustrated in
The process for fabricating the device 1 can implement specific steps to deposit the electrode 3 after the texturing of the surface 22. The electrode 3 can be formed, for example, by magnetron sputtering of a transparent conductive film onto the textured surface 22. The electrode material 3 can be known per se, for example a doped zinc oxide, a doped tin oxide, or a doped indium oxide.
With a deposition of an electrode 3 with an average thickness less than the texturing depth of the surface 22, the experiments showed that a non-uniform thickness of the electrode 3 could be obtained, according to the magnified section schematically illustrated in
Advantageously, the electrode 3 deposited must guarantee a resistance per square at most equal to 100 Ω/square. Such a resistance of the electrode 3 makes it possible to optimally collect the electrical charges generated at the device 4.
Advantageously, the deposited electrode 3 must have a minimum optical reflection over a wavelength range centred around 550 nm.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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18 72614 | Dec 2018 | FR | national |