This invention relates generally to thin-film photovoltaic techniques and more particularly, to a method and structure of a nanowire-enhanced transparent conductive film for thin-film photovoltaic devices. Embodiments of the present invention can be applied to embed metallic nanowires in a transparent conductive oxide film for the manufacture of thin-film photovoltaic devices.
In the process of manufacturing thin-film photovoltaic devices based on copper-indium-selenium (CIS) and/or copper-indium-gallium-selenium (CIGS) absorber materials, there are various manufacturing challenges, such as scaling up the manufacturing to large substrate panels while maintaining structure integrity of substrate materials, ensuring uniformity and granularity of the thin film material, and forming an overlying electrode characterized by both high lateral conductivity and good optical transmission. While conventional techniques in the past have addressed some of these issues, they are often inadequate. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,936,761 discloses a technique of disposing conductive wires having 50 microns or less in diameter in a transparent conductive polymer material for enhancing electrical conductivity while limiting geometrical shadowing area for the absorber material. The size of the conductive wires, however, is in tens of microns range which is still relatively large and difficult in practice to achieve a reduction in resistance without causing the absorption of incoming light by the added wires.
The invention provides a method and structure for enhancing lateral conductivity and optical transparency in electrodes of a thin-film photovoltaic device. Embodiments of the invention can embed conductive nanowires with about 1% effective shadowing area in a transparent conductive oxide film for the manufacture of thin-film photovoltaic devices.
In one embodiment, the invention provides a structure for fabricating thin-film photovoltaic devices. The structure includes an absorber material with a copper-based thin-film photovoltaic compound overlying a conductive material formed on a substrate. A buffer material overlies the absorber material and a transparent conductive oxide is formed over the buffer material. The structure includes a plurality of nanowire conductors embedded in the window layer in an essentially random configuration partially overlapping and crossing each other with less than 2% nominal shadowing area to visible light. Each nanowire conductor has an electrical conductivity about 1000 times higher than the transparent conductive oxide material.
The present invention provides a method for manufacturing thin-film photovoltaic devices in which a barrier layer is formed over a substrate structure, and a first conductive electrode is formed over the barrier layer. Material species including copper, sodium, indium, gallium are deposited on the first electrode and an absorber layer is formed by treating the material in a gaseous environment having selenium and sulfur species, using a predetermined temperature profile. A buffer material is deposited over the absorber and a conductive oxide formed over the buffer material. Nanowires at least partially covering the first conductive oxide material with a less than 2% nominal shadowing area for visible light are then deposited. The nanowires have electrical conductivity on the order of 1000 times higher than the conductive oxide. The method includes forming a second conductive oxide over the nanowires and partially overlying the first conductive oxide to create a second electrode.
In an alternative embodiment the method includes applying nanowire structures over the upper surface with a coverage of about 1% and greater. A transparent conductor material is formed over the nanowires to embed them in the transparent conductor material. The nanowires structures facilitate scattering of incident electromagnetic radiation while allowing the electromagnetic radiation to traverse the thickness of the transparent conductor material and yet not block the absorber material.
The method and structure provided are incorporated in a series of innovative manufacturing processes for making next generation high efficiency thin-film photovoltaic devices. In various embodiments, an nanowire-enhanced transparent conductive oxide film is formed by first adding a TCO film followed by embedding nanowires on the TCO film or simultaneously adding conductive nanowires and forming TCO film. The nanowires are configured in substantially random patterns with about 1% or more physical coverage in the surface area subjected to incoming light. The nanowires are made by high conductivity material, for example, copper, silver or metal alloys, although carbon or organic material can be also be used. In one embodiment, the nanowires are 100 nm or less in diameter with a random crossing configuration, a structure that facilitates off-resonance scattering of electromagnetic waves on the nanowires via surface Plasmon effects and causes substantially no absorption loss of the incoming light. In addition to the small geometric shadowing area of the nanowires, the scattering effect reduces the cross section area blocking light into the absorber material and enables using a host TCO film with substantially lower doping than non-nanowire-enhanced TCO film. As the result, the nanowire-enhanced TCO film has an enhanced lateral conductivity and carrier mobility so that the device can capture more light-converted current with improved efficiency.
The substrate structure used for forming the thin-film photovoltaic device can be a glass substrate, a quartz or plastic substrate, or a semiconductor wafer. The glass substrate can be soda-lime glass, an acrylic glass, a sugar glass, or other material, e.g. a specialty Corning™ glass. In another embodiment, the glass substrate 101 is a monolithically integrated panel directly provided for forming a multi-cell thin-film photovoltaic device. In a specific implementation, as seen in
Referring to
Following the formation of the conductive material 110 overlying the barrier layer 103, a patterning process can be performed to scribe the films (including the conductive material and barrier layer) to form a plurality of line trenches 111 into the continuous films. In a specific embodiment, these line trenches are formed in a parallel stripe patterns across the substrate, forming a natural boundary of a plurality of stripe-shaped photovoltaic cells and being partially utilized for coupling electrically the plurality of stripe-shaped photovoltaic cells. The patterned conductive material 110 is configured to be a lower electrode for each of the plurality of stripe-shaped photovoltaic cells. Additional thin films are to be formed over the stripe patterns and additional patterning processes are to be performed for completing the cell-cell coupling structure at regions located substantially within a vicinity of the plurality of line trenches 111.
Referring to
Following the formation of the photovoltaic absorber material 120, another patterning process can be performed to form another plurality of line patterns 112 which are respectively shifted from the line trenches 111 formed in previous patterning process. A buffer material 131 is applied overlying the patterned absorber material 120. The buffer material 131 is CdS or Cd-free ZnO mixed with ZnS applied using chemical bath method or alternative dipping process. A first transparent conductive oxide (TCO) film 132 is then formed using a MOCVD process overlying the buffer material 120, although other thin-film deposition techniques including sputtering, plating, chemical bath deposition can also be applied depending on embodiments. In an embodiment, the first TCO film 132 is part of the process for forming a transparent electrode near the top-most surface of the monolithically integrated photovoltaic device. The top electrode of each (stripe-shaped) photovoltaic cell is firstly exposed to sun light and in a preferred embodiment to allow substantially all visible spectrum of the light traverse the film and reach the absorber material beneath. Secondly, this is an electrode designated for collecting the electric current generated by the absorber material which absorbs the light and converts photons into electrons. Thus, the top electrode is preferred to be made of one or more materials characterized by substantial transparency to light in visible spectrum and high lateral electrical conductivity. TCO film has been applied as a top electrode material in the manufacture of thin-film photovoltaic devices, as seen in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/086,135, filed Apr. 13, 2011, assigned to Stion Corporation in San Jose and incorporated as reference for all purposes. A typical TCO film is zinc oxide film formed using a MOCVD process, where the ZnO film is doped with Boron or Aluminum to achieve different conductivity levels. For example, a low doping level ZnO film with higher sheet resistivity may be formed first over the absorber material 120 for forming an Ohmic contact for the top electrode. Then, a higher doping level ZnO film is added for increasing the lateral conductivity within the whole TCO film. On the one hand, there is a tradeoff of having higher doping level in the TCO film. That is a reduction in free-carrier mobility which leads to an increased optical absorption by the free carriers in the long wavelength region of the visible light. On the other hand, by increasing TCO film thickness the lateral conductivity can be enhanced while the larger thickness results in less optical transmission as a tradeoff.
In a specific embodiment, followed by formation of a TCO film 132 having a reduced doping level and a reduced thickness, nanowires 140 with conductive material are disposed over the TCO film 132. The nanowires 140 can be pre-made metallic nanowires which are sprayed onto an upper surface of the TCO film 140. In another embodiment, the metallic nanowires can be formed by an in-situ chemical deposition or atomic deposition or a deposition followed by a lithography patterning process. The nanowires are made of a metal or alloy material such as gold, silver, copper, aluminum, molybdenum, tungsten and typically have an electrical conductivity about 1000 times greater than the TCO film itself. Each nanowire has a diameter or cross section dimension of about 100 nm and an aspect ratio typically ranging from 1:1 to 1000:1. In a specific embodiment, the spraying of the nanowires is limited to an amount corresponding to 2% or less in terms of a shadowing area. In an embodiment, the nanowires are laid out on the TCO film in a substantially ordered form, e.g., with their length in parallel mutually and to the upper surface very much aligned along a current flow direction. In another embodiment, the nanowires may be laid out on the TCO film in a relatively random pattern with their length oriented nearly in the upper surface but pointed in different directions. In yet another embodiment, these nanowires may be overlapped or may not be directly connected to each other. Overall, due to higher conductivity of the nanowires, the cross-link directly between the overlapped nanowires or via through a small middle portion of conductive TCO film multiple current pathways are formed with higher conductivity. At the same time, with only about 2% or less in shadowing area the nanowires block very little incoming light so that the light transmission through the nanowire-enhanced structure remains high, e.g. at least 90%.
In an alternative embodiment, the nanowires 140 are covered by a second TCO film 133. The second TCO film 133 is a material substantially the same as TCO film 132 and can be formed at the same time the nanowires are sprayed onto the upper surface of the TCO film 132. As the nanowires are captured during the TCO deposition there is no need for adhesives, firing or other process step to ensure adhesion of the nanowire with the host TCO material. Both TCO film 132 and TCO film 133 can be ZnO material formed using a MOCVD process. In an alternative embodiment, the second TCO film 133 can have a higher doping level. As the nanowires are embedded in the TCO film 132 and 133, the lateral electrical conductivity is greatly enhanced, for example, up to 1000 times, and the free-carrier mobility may be enhanced by roughly 3 times. Because of the nanowires, the host TCO film 132 or 133 can be formed with substantially reduced doping level compared to the case without nanowires.
Followed by the formation of TCO film (132 or both 132 and 133) and embedded metallic nanowires 140 therein, another patterning process can be performed to create line patterns 113 which are also shifted respectively to the previously formed patterns 111 and 112, leading to a completion of an electrical coupling structure there and a formation of the top electrode in the nanowire-enhanced TCO film for collecting electric currents and connecting all stripe-shaped cells together (in parallel or in series) for the thin-film photovoltaic device 100 that formed on the substrate 101. A bonding or encapsulating material 150 is then applied overlying the nanowire-enhanced TCO film, followed by disposing a cap window glass 160 over the encapsulating material to seal the thin-film photovoltaic device 100.
The nanowire-enhanced TCO film provides several advantages. First, the film lateral conductivity can be enhanced without reduction in optical transmission. The electrical conductivity of typical MOCVD-processed zinc oxide (ZnO) is about 600 S/cm while the electrical conductivity of silver, a typical material used for forming the nanowires, is about 6×105 S/cm. That is about 1000 times more in electrical conduction per unit volume. Second, adding nanowires also reduces the need for a particular doping level in TCO film. The lateral conductivity can be held constant despite the reduction of doping levels, leading to increased carrier mobility or higher conductivity per carrier. This results in larger grain structures in the TCO film which produce favorable short wavelength light scattering, and generally improves photovoltaic solar cell current generation. Third, silver has about 3 time higher free-carrier mobility than ZnO. This means less optical absorption by the free-carriers in the long wavelength region for nanowire-enhanced TCO film than for conventional TCO film (e.g., ZnO film) with equivalent electrical conductivity.
A simplified model for estimating the amount of nanowires to be incorporated in a standard 2 μm ZnO film (having a sheet resistance of 7 Ω per unit area) is discussed next.
If silver is in a form of a wire 1 cm in length and an X-squared cross-section, e.g. as shown in
The shadowing effect or the optical cross-section area of these wires can also be estimated.
Additionally, as the metallic nanowires are embedded in the host TCO film, a metal-dielectric interface is formed for each nanowire. When incident electromagnetic wave (EM) hits the interface a refraction, a transmission, and a reflection of the EM usually occurs. In addition, provided that the cross-sectional dimension or the diameter of the nanowire is in a range of hundreds of nanometers, localized surface Plasmons excitation is also induced to generate an interface wave propagation. Providing that the cross-sectional dimension or the diameter of the nanowire is about 100 nanometers or smaller while major ranges of visible spectrum is in about 350 nm to 1400 nm, so that the incoming visible light is mostly in off-resonance range upon hitting the interface of the metallic nanowire vs. the host oxide film. As the result, the EM is predominantly scattered without much absorption by the nanowires. Adding the light scattering effect around the nanowires, the effective shadowing (or absorption cross section area) of these nanowires will be smaller than actual geometrical size, providing an enhancement in overall light transmission through the nanowire-enhanced TCO Film. Other trade-offs between the sheet resistance and the optical transmission are possible by varying different wire contents and host TCO film doping levels. In another example, the nanowires are formed with asymmetrical shapes having a narrower width at its disposed position in the plane of the TCO film so that the nominal cross-section and resulted optical absorption could be further reduced.
In one or more embodiments, depending on applications the nanowires can be laid out in a plane of the TCO film with various structure configurations.
Nanowires 440 are disposed in a random configuration over the TCO film 430 with each nanowire being directly or indirectly contacted with the conductive TCO film, forming a nanowire-enhanced TCO film without adding other conductive film on top of those nanowires. Each nanowire typically has a lateral dimension of about 100 nm or less and an aspect ratio greater than 1 and usually near 1000:1. For example, pre-formed silver nanowires bearing above geometric characteristics and an electrical conductivity of about 1000 times higher than the nominal TCO film are sprayed over an upper surface of TCO film 430 for forming the nanowire-enhanced TCO film. The randomly crossed or overlapped nanowires form a mesh network providing conduction paths that have substantially higher lateral electrical conductivity than nominal TCO film itself. Additionally as mentioned earlier, by controlling an amount of the disposed nanowires the effective cross-section for light absorption associated with these nanowires can be limited to 2% or less. The relative low electrical conductivity of the HRT layer is compensated by the highly conductive nanowires while keeping the optical transparency high for the whole nanowire-enhanced TCO film.
A second partial portion of the TCO film 431 is formed to embed the nanowires 441. In a specific embodiment, the second portion of the TCO film added fills the intestinal regions of a matrix of the randomly distributed nanowires. The second TCO film may be added with the disposition of the nanowires by the sprinkler. Therefore, all nanowires are captured during the TCO deposition and there is no need for adhesives, firing or other process steps to ensure adhesion. As a result, the nanowire-enhanced structure is also a TCO film with embedded nanowires. The second TCO film can be applied up to an amount for just covering the matrix of nanowires to have a minimized average thickness for the whole nanowire-enhanced TCO film. The reduced thickness of the TCO film helps retain high optical transparency. In another specific embodiment, the second partial portion of TCO film is same material used for the first partial portion of the TCO film 431, characterized by n-type doping level, resistivity level, and optical transparency.
As shown in
As shown, the above method provides a way of enhancing lateral conductivity and free-carrier mobility of the top electrode of thin-film photovoltaic device without causing significant light shadowing effects. In a preferred embodiment, the method implements a technique to disposing nanowires with coverage over or within a transparent conductive material forming the top electrode of the thin-film photovoltaic device.
As shown in
The method 500 includes a step 520 for forming a first electrode on the substrate. For thin-film photovoltaic device, the first electrode, or back electrode, is made by a metal, metal alloy, metal oxide, or other inorganic or organic conductive materials. The conductive material is deposited, sputtered, coated, painted, or plated over the substrate. In a specific embodiment, a barrier layer is formed first overlying the bare substrate surface then the conductive material is added overlying the barrier layer. The barrier layer serves a diffusion barrier for preventing certain material species to drift into the electrode material or upper films and also serves as an adhesion or bonding material between the substrate and the first electrode. In an embodiment, the barrier layer is made by a dielectric material selected from silicon oxide, aluminum oxide, titanium nitride, silicon nitride, tantalum oxide, and zirconium oxide or the likes. Once the conductive material is formed as a film over the substrate, a patterning process can be implemented to pattern the conductive material by scribing a first plurality of line trenches across the substrate. These line trenches are formed using laser or mechanical scriber to penetrate through the film across one of the dimension of the substrate and, in one or more embodiments, are aligned in parallel with an equal spacing distributed along the other dimension of the substrate. These line patterns serve a basis for forming a plurality of electric coupling structures that couples, either in series or in parallel, a plurality of stripe-shaped cells of the thin-film photovoltaic device.
Referring to
The method 500 further includes step 540 for processing the precursor thin film material in a gaseous environment containing selenium and/or sulfur species. In an embodiment, the process is conducted in a furnace made by material that is thermally conductive and chemically inert. The gaseous selenium species is first introduced to perform a reactive annealing of the precursor thin film material containing copper, indium, and/or gallium species following one or more stages of a predetermined temperature profile. Further, the gaseous sulfur species is introduced, with optionally removing the selenium species, to perform another reactive annealing at some additional stages of the predetermined temperature profile. A quick cooling process is followed after the second annealing process. As the result, the precursor thin film material is transformed into a photovoltaic absorber material that contain substantially a copper indium gallium selenium (CIGS) or copper indium gallium selenium sulfur (CIGSS) multi-grained compound material with a preferred composition ratio of Cu/(In+Ga) of about 0.9. The absorber material as formed bears a p-type semiconductor characteristic and an energy band-gap of about 1 eV to 1.2 eV for facilitating light absorption within a broad range of visible light band to achieve high efficiency for converting sun light into electricity energy. This is merely used as an example of many optional thin-film photovoltaic absorber materials which should not limit the scope of the claims herein. Depending on applications, there can be many variations, alternatives, and modifications. For example, additional process may be inserted after the formation of the photovoltaic absorber material, including patterning the absorber for scribing a second plurality of line trenches across the first dimension of the substrate. The second plurality of line trenches is substantially parallel to and shifted away by a pre-determined distance from the first plurality of line trenches, commonly serving basis forming the cell boundaries and cell-cell electric coupling structures.
Furthermore, the method 500 includes a step 550 of forming a first transparent conductive oxide (TCO) material overlying the absorber material. Firstly, a n-type material is needed for forming over the p-type absorber material to complete a formation of pn-junction for the thin-film photovoltaic device. A buffer layer is first formed overlying the as-formed absorber material. In a specific embodiment, the buffer material is made by chemical bath process, containing a cadmium sulfide, or zinc oxide, or zinc oxide mixed with zinc sulfide. Over the buffer layer, a first transparent conductive oxide material with n-type doped semiconductor characteristic can be formed. Both the first transparent conductive oxide material and the buffer layer are combined to serve as a window layer for completion of a p-n junction for the photovoltaic device. In another specific embodiment, the first transparent conductive oxide is doped with a relative low dosage boron species or aluminum species to have a high sheet resistance ranging from 102 to 104 mΩ·cm but retain high optical transmission with greater than 90% transparency to visible light.
Moreover, as shown in
In an alternative embodiment, the method 500 further includes steps for patterning the nanowire-enhanced TCO material by scribing through all films formed on the substrate to form a third plurality of line trenches. The third plurality of line trenches, in an embodiment, is substantially parallel to the first and second plurality of line trenches but shifted by another distance (see step 520 and 540). All these line trenches macroscopically divide the thin film on the substrate into multiple stripe shaped cells. The combined structures associated with all three sets of line trenches are designed as an electrical coupling structure that links two neighboring cells and subsequently all the stripe-shaped cells for the thin-film photovoltaic device. The patterning process can be performed using laser beam scribing, particle beam scribing, or mechanical scribing. Following the scribing certain refilling process of a conductive or an insulation material is performed to complete the coupling structure. Of course, there are many variations, alternatives, and modifications.
In an alternative specific embodiment, the present invention provides a method for applying a plurality of nanowire structures with a predetermined dosage in a host conductive dielectric film for fabricating a solar cell structure. According to the embodiment, a substrate structure is provided for fabricating the solar cell. The substrate structure can be a monolithically integrated glass panel, or a silicon wafer, or a wafer made from three-five group material. On the substrate structure or partially by itself, an absorber material is formed to provide an upper surface region. In a specific embodiment, the absorber material is a thin film compound material made from a copper bearing material, an indium bearing material, and a gallium bearing material. By either an in situ or an ex situ technique, a plurality of nanowire structures is applied overlying the upper surface region with a physical coverage of about 1% and greater. In an ex situ method, the pre-fabricated nanowire structures can be sprayed with a controlled deposition rate over the upper surface region by a sprinkler up to the predetermined coverage.
In an embodiment, the nanowires are pre-fabricated from silver, gold, aluminum, molybdenum, tungsten, or metal alloys. In another embodiment, the nanowires are carbon, graphite, or organic material. The nanowires have high electrical conductivity (about 100 or 1000 times greater than typical conductive dielectric material), a cross-sectional dimension or diameter of about 100 nm, and an aspect ratio ranging from near to 1:1 to 1000:1 or greater (though majority being near 1000:1 aspect ratio).
A transparent conductor material is formed over the nanowires. In an embodiment, the transparent conductor material is zinc oxide and/or ZnOxS1-x material formed by physical vapor deposition, chemical vapor deposition, metal-organic chemical vapor deposition, sputter deposition, and chemical bath deposition. The transparent conductor material is formed to a thickness sufficient for filling and embedding the nanowires within the thickness. In another specific embodiment, applying or spraying of the nanowires onto the upper surface region and the forming of the transparent conductor material occurs substantially simultaneously to form a nanowire-enhanced transparent conductor film.
In another specific embodiment, the plurality of nanowire structures is not only configured to have a diameter of about 100 nm and an 1000:1 aspect ratio or less for each nanowire structure but also is applied such that they are distributed in a substantially random configuration on the upper surface region except of having their lengths are more likely on the surface region due to gravitational force. The interconnect between nearest nanowires is random but still results in a formation of a conductor mesh network for facilitating electrical current flow, leading to substantial reduction in lateral resistance of the nanowire-enhanced transparent conductor film compared to the host transparent conductor material alone. Additionally, the randomly interconnected nanowire structures have a controlled low surface coverage to produce less than 2% shadowing area for the incoming light when it is acted as a top electrode for a finished solar cell. Furthermore, the nanometer scaled diameter of the nanowire structures does not causes strong excitation of surface Plasmons so that the electromagnetic waves associated with the visible light (wavelengths ranging from 350 nm to 1400 nm) are substantially scattered around the nanowire structure surfaces without being absorbed by the nanowire structures. This effective reduce the cross section area of the light absorption (smaller than physical shadowing area) by enhancing scattering of incident electromagnetic radiation while allowing the electromagnetic radiation to traverse the thickness of the transparent conductor material and be substantially free from blocking the absorber material beneath.
In an implementation of the present invention, the thickness of transparent conductor material alone is characterized by a sheet resistivity of 3 ohms/square or smaller. As the transparent conductor material is applied to embed the plurality of nanowire structures up to the thickness ranges from about 1 to 3 microns, the nanowire-enhanced transparent conductor film can have its sheet resistivity reduced 10 or 100 times smaller. This allows a low doping level in the transparent conductor material and results less free-carrier absorption of the income visible light. In a specific embodiment, the thickness of transparent conductor material including the embeded the plurality of nanowire structures is characterized by a transparency of 90% and greater transmission for incident electromagnetic radiation ranging in about 350 nm to 1400 nm.
It is understood that the examples and embodiments described herein are for illustrative purposes only and that various modifications or changes in light thereof will be suggest to persons skilled in the art and are to be included within the spirit and purview of this application and scope of the appended claims. Although the above examples have been generally described in terms of a specific thin-film photovoltaic structure with CIS, CIGS, CIGSS absorber material, other absorber materials certainly can also be applied and incorporated with a nanowire-enhanced TCO film transparent conductive top electrode, without departing from the invention described by the claims herein.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/505,475, filed Jul. 7, 2011, entitled “Nanowire Enhanced Transparent Conductive Oxide for Thin Film Photovoltaic Devices.” The entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61505475 | Jul 2011 | US |