1. Field
Some embodiments generally relate to electrical systems incorporating one or more optical elements. More specifically, embodiments may relate to an optical element efficiently adapted for interconnection to electrical devices.
2. Brief Description
In some conventional devices, an optical element (e.g., a lens) may include metal traces for interconnection to an electrical circuit. The metal traces may be fabricated on and/or within the optical element by any of several known techniques. Using thin film lithographic techniques, metal is evaporated or sputtered onto an optical element within a vacuum, photoresist is deposited on the metal and patterned via masking and UV exposure, and areas of the metal are etched in accordance with the photoresist pattern. Thin film lithography may provide geometrically accurate traces but entails significant expense.
Thick film techniques may alternatively be used for fabricating metal traces onto an optical element. In accordance with one thick film technique, a stencil is placed on an optical element and a metal paste is applied to the stencil and the optical element. The stencil is removed and the paste is heated to form a solid metal material. Fabrication using thick film techniques is typically less expensive than corresponding thin film-based fabrication, but cannot provide tolerances required by certain applications.
What is needed is a system to efficiently fabricate metal traces on an optical element. Such a system may provide the accuracy of thin film lithography where needed and cost advantages of thick film fabrication where such accuracy is not required.
To address at least the foregoing, some aspects provide a method, means and/or process steps to deposit conductive material on an optical element using a thick film process, deposit dielectric material on the conductive material, create an aperture in the dielectric material using photolithography to expose a portion of the conductive material, and couple an electrical contact of a solar cell to the exposed portion of the conductive material.
In some aspects, the conductive material deposited on the optical element defines a window from which light may pass out of the optical element, and the electrical contact of the solar cell is coupled to the exposed portion of the conductive material such that an optically-active area of the solar cell is aligned with the window. Deposition of the conductive material on the optical element in some aspects includes placing a stencil on the optical element and spraying molten conductive material on the stencil and the optical element.
According to certain aspects, the dielectric material comprises thick photoresist and creation of the aperture includes masking the thick photoresist in accordance with a location of the aperture, exposing the masked photoresist, and removing portions of the thick photoresist corresponding to the location of the aperture. In other aspects, creation of the aperture includes deposition of thin photoresist on the dielectric material, masking of the thin photoresist in accordance with a location of the aperture, exposure of the masked photoresist, removal of portions of the thin photoresist corresponding to the location of the aperture, and etching away of portions of the dielectric material corresponding to the location of the aperture.
Still other aspects include creation of the aperture by depositing thin photoresist on the conductive material, masking the thin photoresist in accordance with a location of the aperture, exposing the masked photoresist, and removing portions of the thin photoresist corresponding to the location of the aperture. Deposition of the dielectric material may therefore comprise depositing the dielectric material on the thin photoresist.
Some aspects provide an optical element including conductive material deposited on the optical element using a thick film process, dielectric material disposed on the conductive material and defining an aperture created using photolithography, the aperture exposing a portion of the conductive material, and a solar cell comprising an electrical contact coupled to the exposed portion of the conductive material. The dielectric material may include thick photoresist, and the aperture may have been created by masking the thick photoresist in accordance with a location of the aperture, exposing the masked photoresist, and removing portions of the thick photoresist corresponding to the location of the aperture.
Alternatively, the aperture may have been created by depositing thin photoresist on the dielectric material, masking the thin photoresist in accordance with a location of the aperture, exposing the masked photoresist, removing portions of the thin photoresist corresponding to the location of the aperture, and etching away portions of the dielectric material corresponding to the location of the aperture.
In yet other aspects, the aperture may have been created by depositing thin photoresist on the conductive material, masking the thin photoresist in accordance with a location of the aperture, exposing the masked photoresist, and removing portions of the thin photoresist corresponding to the location of the aperture. Deposition of the dielectric material may therefore include depositing the dielectric material on the thin photoresist.
According to some aspects, the conductive material deposited on the optical element defines a window from which light may pass out of the optical element, and the electrical contact of the solar cell is coupled to the exposed portion of the conductive material such that an optically-active area of the solar cell is aligned with the window.
Some aspects may also provide a reflective material deposited on the optical element and an electrical isolator deposited on the reflective material, wherein the conductive material is deposited on the electrical isolator.
The claims are not limited to the disclosed embodiments, however, as those in the art can readily adapt the description herein to create other embodiments and applications.
The construction and usage of embodiments will become readily apparent from consideration of the following specification as illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals designate like parts.
The following description is provided to enable any person in the art to make and use the described embodiments and sets forth the best mode contemplated for carrying out some embodiments. Various modifications, however, will remain readily apparent to those in the art.
Initially, at S110, conductive material is deposited on an optical element using a thick film process. The conductive material may comprise any combination of one or more currently- or hereafter-known conductors, including but not limited to copper, gold and nickel. According to some embodiments, the optical element may be configured to manipulate and/or pass desired wavelengths of light. The optical element may comprise any number of disparate materials and/or elements (e.g., lenses, reflective surfaces and optically-transparent portions).
The conductive material may be deposited at S110 by thermal spraying, paste deposition, or other thick film techniques. Thick film techniques may produce a layer of material that is less geometrically precise than a layer deposited using thin film techniques. However, thick film techniques may allow for inexpensive deposition of the conductive material while also satisfying relatively loose geometric tolerances that may be required of the conductive layer.
Thermal spraying the conductive material may include heating a powder of conductive material (e.g., copper) to a molten state and spraying the molten powder onto the optical element. The molten powder then cools on the optical element to produce a solid layer of conductive material. Paste-based thick film techniques may involve mixing metal powder and a carrier to create a paste and applying the paste to an optical element using pad printing, needles, screen printing, a roller and/or a squeegee tool. The optical element and paste are thereafter heated and cooled to form the solid layer of conductive material. In some embodiments, a stencil may be applied to the optical element before applying the paste or spraying the molten powder onto the optical element. The conductive material is therefore deposited in a pattern defined by the stencil.
A thickness of material 210 on optical element 220 need not be as uniform as shown in
Returning to process 100, dielectric material is deposited on the conductive material at S120. The dielectric material may comprise cured thick-film photoresist or any other suitable dielectric material.
Next, at S130, an aperture is created in the dielectric material using photolithography. Any photolithographic systems and techniques may be used to create the aperture. According to some embodiments, photoresist is deposited on the dielectric material, masked and patterned to define locations corresponding to the apertures. Photoresist disposed at those locations is removed and the exposed dielectric material is etched away to expose portions of the conductive material.
In a case that the dielectric material itself comprises photoresist, the dielectric material itself may be masked and patterned to define the aperture locations. The material at the locations is then removed to define the apertures. The dielectric material/photoresist may then require curing according to some embodiments. The use of photolithography at S130 may provide desired accuracy in the location of the apertures.
An electrical contact of a solar cell is coupled to an exposed portion of the conductive material at S140. The coupling forms an electrical and a mechanical interconnection between the conductive material and the solar cell. Various flip-chip bonding techniques may be employed in some embodiments to couple the electrical contact of the solar cell to the exposed portion of the conductive material.
Solar cell 500 may comprise a solar cell (e.g., a III-V cell, II-VI cell, etc.) for receiving photons from optical element 220 and generating electrical charge carriers in response thereto. In this regard, some embodiments include an opening through dielectric material 230 and conductive material 210 through which solar cell 500 may receive light from optical element 220. By accurately fabricating apertures 235, some embodiments provide accurate placement of an optically-active area of solar cell 500 with respect to the opening. This accurate placement may allow for a smaller solar cell (i.e., less silicon) than would be required by designs providing less accurate placement.
Process 600 begins at S605, at which an optical element is obtained. The optical element may be composed of any suitable material or combination of materials. The optical element may be created using any combination of devices and systems that is or becomes known.
Element 700 includes convex surface 710, pedestal 720, and concave surface 730. The purposes of each portion of element 700 during operation according to some embodiments will become evident from the description below.
A reflective material is deposited on the optical element at S610. The reflective material may be intended to create one or more mirrored surfaces. Any suitable reflective material may be used, taking into account factors such as but not limited to the wavelengths of light to be reflected, bonding of the reflective material to the optical element, and cost. The reflective material may be deposited by sputtering, evaporation, liquid deposition, etc.
Next, at S615, an electrical insulator is deposited on the reflective material. The insulator may comprise any suitable insulator or insulators. Non-exhaustive examples include polymers, dielectrics, polyester, epoxy and polyurethane. The insulator may be deposited using any process that is or becomes known. In some embodiments, the insulator is powder-coated onto the optical element.
Some embodiments of S615 are depicted in
Returning to process 600, a pattern of conductive material is deposited on the insulator using a thick film process at S620. The conductive material may be composed of any combination of one or more materials (e.g., nickel, copper), and may be deposited using the thermal spraying, paste-based, or other techniques described above. A stencil may be employed at S620 as also described.
Embodiments of S620 such as that depicted in
Conductive materials 760 and 770 may create a conductive path for electrical current generated by a photovoltaic (solar) cell coupled to element 700. Conductive material 760 and conductive material 770 may also, as described in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2006/0231133, electrically link solar cells of adjacent solar concentrators in a solar concentrator array.
Aperture 765 may comprise an exit window for light entering element 700. Aperture 765 may be formed by masking a corresponding area of pedestal 720 prior to depositing conductive material 760. Such masking may comprise depositing a liquid or solid mask on pedestal 720 prior to S620 and removing (i.e., peeling or dissolving) the mask thereafter. Some embodiments employ photolithography to define aperture 765 after depositing conductive material on the entirety of pedestal 720 at S620.
At S625, dielectric material is deposited on the conductive material. Any suitable material of any suitable thickness may be deposited at S640 in any suitable manner.
Thin-film photoresist is deposited on the dielectric material at S630. The close-up perspective view of
The deposited photoresist is masked at S635 in accordance with a desired location of an aperture. Masking at S635 may proceed using known techniques and may depend on a desired accuracy, wavelength of exposing light, type of photoresist, etc. The masked photoresist is then exposed to light at S640 and, depending on whether the photoresist is “negative” or “positive”, exposed or unexposed portions of the photoresist are removed at S645.
An electrical contact of a solar cell is coupled to an exposed portion of the conductive material at S6505. The electrical contact may be coupled such that an optically-active area of the solar cell is aligned with aperture 765. The electrical contact may comprise a solder bump, and any number of intermediate conductive elements such as various layers of bonding pads may be used to couple the electrical contact to the exposed portion.
Apparatus 700 of
Solar cell 800 receives a substantial portion of the photon energy received at surface 798 and generates electrical current in response to the received photon energy. The electrical current may be passed to external circuitry (and/or to similar serially-connected apparatuses) through conductive material 760 and conductive material 770. In this regard, solar cell 800 may also comprise an electrical contact electrically coupled to conductive material 770. Such a contact would exhibit a polarity opposite to the polarity of the contacts to which solder bumps 805 are coupled.
The several embodiments described herein are solely for the purpose of illustration. Embodiments may include any currently or hereafter-known versions of the elements described herein. Therefore, persons in the art will recognize from this description that other embodiments may be practiced with various modifications and alterations.
The present application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/899,150, filed on Feb. 2, 2007 and entitled “Concentrated Photovoltaic Energy Designs”, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60899150 | Feb 2007 | US |