The invention relates to the field of photovoltaic devices and their manufacture. More particularly, the invention relates to thin-film silicon-based solar cells and modules having the so-called tandem junction structure and to the improvement of the overall manufacturing process thereof.
Hydrogenated Microcrystalline Silicon (μc-Si:H) (Also Called Nanocrystalline nc-Si:H) Material and Hydrogenated Amorphous Silicon (a-Si:H) Material
Photovoltaic devices, also referred to as photoelectric conversion devices or more specifically as solar cells (when light originating from the sun shall be converted), are devices which convert light, especially sunlight, into direct current (DC) electrical power. For low-cost mass production, thin film solar cells are of particular interest.
The solar cell layer stack, i.e. the layer sequence responsible for or capable of the photovoltaic conversion is deposited as a sequence of thin layers. The deposition is customarily performed by a vacuum deposition process such as by PVD (physical vapour deposition), CVD (chemical vapour deposition), PECVD (plasma-enhanced chemical vapour deposition), LPCVD (low pressure CVD), Hot-Wire CVD, all or most of them being used in semiconductor technology.
A thin-film solar cell generally includes a first electrode (such as a contact layer), one or more semiconductor thin-film p-i-n or n-i-p stacks and a second electrode (such as another contact layer), which layers are successively stacked on a substrate. Each p-i-n or n-i-p stack includes an i-layer sandwiched between a p-doped layer and an n-doped layer. The i-layer occupies the major portion of the thickness of the thin-film p-i-n or n-i-p stack. Photoelectric conversion occurs primarily in the i-layer.
Prior Art
In an alternative embodiment, the layer sequence p-i-n as described can be inverted to n-i-p. This is done if light impinging direction on the stack is inverted. In this case the substrate 41 is intransparent and the contact layer 42 is reflecting. The layer 44 is then n-doped, layer 45 is at least substantially intrinsic, and layer 46 is p-doped.
The cell includes a second contact layer 47. In p-i-n configuration as shown in
In n-i-p configuration the second contact layer is transparent and no reflective layer 48 is provided.
For illustrative purposes, arrows indicate impinging light for p-i-n configuration, i.e. configuration where light impinges from substrate backside.
Depending on the material structure of the i-layer, a solar cell is called an amorphous hydrogenated silicon cell or a microcrystalline hydrogenated silicon cell independent of the material and material structure of the p- and n-doped layers.
Nowadays, so called tandem junction solar cells are of increasing interest. Tandem junction solar cells (also referred to as tandem cells) are cells with at least two thin-film single cells stacked one on the other. This way, cells with spectrally different conversion efficiencies can be combined to result in an overall spectral conversion efficiency which is effective in a broader spectral band compared with the spectral efficiency of each single cell. The single cell sensitivity spectra may be different from each other or mutually overlapping to some extent. Known in the art is the combination of an amorphous hydrogenated silicon cell with a microcrystalline hydrogenated silicon cell as latter is sensitive up to longer wavelengths of sunlight than the former one.
Tandem cell 50 further comprises a second stack 51 of p-i-n layers 52, 53, 54, which are respectively p-doped, substantially intrinsic (i-type) and n-doped. The i-layer of the p-i-n stack 51 is of amorphous hydrogenated silicon.
In
If direction of impinging light is inversed, then the stacks are realised in n-i-p configuration and the sequence of the stacks 51 and 43 is inversed with respect to the now intransparent substrate.
It is an object of the present invention to provide for a tandem cell as was addressed and for a respective converter panel with an increased photovoltaic conversion efficiency and for a method for manufacturing such cell and panel.
The addressed object is achieved by the device and method according to the claims.
The photovoltaic device comprises a substrate;
It has been found that this way, particularly high initial efficiencies and also particularly high stabilized efficiencies are achieved.
In one embodiment, the first contact layer is made substantially of TCO.
In one embodiment which may be combined with one or more of the before-addressed embodiments, the first at least substantially intrinsic layer is an intrinsic amorphous layer of hydrogenates silicon.
In one embodiment which may be combined with one or more of the before-addressed embodiments, the second at least substantially intrinsic layer is an intrinsic microcrystalline layer of hydrogenated silicon.
In one embodiment which may be combined with one or more of the before-addressed embodiments, the sequence of the layers is, along the direction of incident light:
In one embodiment which may be combined with one or more of the before-addressed embodiments, the sum of the thicknesses of the first at least substantially intrinsic layer and of the second at least substantially intrinsic layer is below 2 μm.
In one embodiment which may be combined with one or more of the before-addressed embodiments, the second contact layer comprises, in particular substantially consists of TCO. In particular this TCO is of ZnO which may also be valid for the TCO applied as the first contact layer.
In one embodiment which may be combined with one or more of the before-addressed embodiments, the thickness of the first at least substantially intrinsic layer is 250 nm or 230 nm.
In one embodiment which may be combined with one or more of the before-addressed embodiments, the thickness of the second at least substantially intrinsic layer is 1.28 μm.
In one embodiment, the substrate is a commercially available possibly TCO- pre-coated glass, and the thickness of the first at least substantially intrinsic layer is 210 nm, the thickness of the second at least substantially intrinsic layer 1.41 μm.
In one embodiment which may be combined with one or more of the before-addressed embodiments, the substrate is a transparent substrate, in particular a glass substrate.
In one embodiment which may be combined with one or more of the before-addressed embodiments, the first and second layer stacks are deposited by means of PECVD.
The photovoltaic converter panel comprises at least one photovoltaic cell according to the invention, in particular a multitude thereof.
In one embodiment, the photovoltaic converter panel has a surface extent of at least 2500 cm2, more particularly a surface extent of at least 1.4 m2.
The method of manufacturing a photovoltaic device comprises the steps of
In one embodiment of the method, the method comprises the step of depositing or providing a TCO layer on the substrate e.g. by depositing or providing a layer of ZnO.
In one embodiment, the deposition is carried out so that the thickness of the first at least substantially intrinsic layer is 250 nm and the thickness of the second at least substantially intrinsic layer 1.28 μm.
Further embodiments and advantages of the invention become evident to the skilled artisan from the dependent claims and the following description of examples.
Below, the invention is described in more detail by means of examples and figures. The figures show:
The described embodiments are meant as examples and shall not confine the invention.
The present invention relates to thin-film photovoltaic devices especially solar cell panels and to a method for their manufacturing. Although applicable to other photovoltaic devices we will now refer to solar cells. Solar cell panels can, for example, be used in architectural applications. We have described solar cell tandem structures in context with
As perfectly known to the skilled artisan, in a solar cell thin film semiconductor cell an i-layer is sandwiched between a p- and an n-doped layer.
The substrate used for solar cell panels can be of any suitable material for receiving the electrically conductive contact and the subsequent layer stacks. The substrate is generally flat and can be glass, glass-ceramics, ceramics or other glass-like material, a plastic such as a polyimide, or a metal film such as a film of aluminum, steel, titanium, chromium, iron, and the like. In order to meet the goal of efficient production of solar cell panels, standardization is desirable. One size common in the market today is based on a 1.4 m2 glass substrate with 1.1 m×1.3 m extent. The present invention, however, is not limited to this size and may be successfully applied to other sizes and shapes, be it rectangular or square.
The manufacturing process described herein results in a tandem cell structure of high conversion efficiency, η.
Following the structure as shown in
When a commercially available TCO- pre-coated glass was used an initial efficiency of ηi=11.6% could be reached. In this case, the thickness of the intrinsic layer of amorphous hydrogenated silicon was 210 nm and the thickness of the intrinsic microcrystalline layer of hydrogenated silicon 1.41 μm.
The deposition process for the layer stacks 51 and 43 was performed using a KAI PECVD deposition system, as commercially available from Oerlikon Solar. The ZnO (TCO) layers were deposited on a system TCO 1200, also from Oerlikon Solar.
Further tandem solar cells with amorphous and with microcrystalline cells—called micromorph tandems—have been prepared in the KAI-M reactor, which showed initial efficiencies of 12.1%. Up-scaling of such micromorph tandems to mini-modules and to 1.4 m2 area modules have led to remarkable high efficiencies.
Table I summarizes the AM1.5 I-V results of a-Si:H/μc-Si:H tandems cells of 1 cm2 area with Asahi SnO2 and LPCVD deposited ZnO, respectively, as front TCOs (cf. ref. 42 in
One module of 1.4 m2 achieved an initial power of 125.8 W (see
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP09/54577 | 4/17/2009 | WO | 00 | 10/15/2010 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61046103 | Apr 2008 | US | |
61093418 | Sep 2008 | US |