1. Field of the Invention (Technical Field)
The present invention relates to methods and processes for fabricating a back-contact silicon solar cell, and solar cells made by such methods.
2. Background Art
Back-contact silicon solar cells have several advantages compared to conventional silicon solar cells with contacts on both the front and rear surfaces. The first advantage is that back-contact cells have a higher conversion efficiency due to reduced or eliminated contact obscuration losses (sunlight reflected from contact grid is unavailable to be converted into electricity). The second advantage is that assembly of back-contact cells into electrical circuits is easier, and therefore cheaper, because both polarity contacts are on the same surface. As an example, significant cost savings compared to present photovoltaic module assembly can be achieved with back-contact cells by encapsulating the photovoltaic module and the solar cell electrical circuit in a single step. The last advantage of a back-contact cell is better aesthetics through a more uniform appearance. Aesthetics is important for some applications, such as building-integrated photovoltaic systems and photovoltaic sunroofs for automobiles.
A generic back-contact solar cell is illustrated in
There are several approaches for making a back-contact silicon solar cell. These approaches include metallization wrap around (MWA), metallization wrap through (MWT), emitter wrap through (EWT), and back-junction structures. MWA and MWT have current collection grids on the front surface. These grids are, respectively, wrapped around the edge or through holes to the back surface in order to make a back-contact cell. The EWT cell wraps the current-collection junction (“emitter”) from the front surface to the rear surface through doped conductive channels in the silicon wafer. “Emitter” refers to a heavily doped region in a semiconductor device. Such conductive channels can be produced by, for example, drilling holes in the silicon substrate with a laser and subsequently forming the emitter inside the holes at the same time as forming the emitter on front and rear surfaces. The back-junction cells have both the negative and positive polarity collection junctions on the rear surface of the solar cell. Because most of the light is absorbed—and therefore also most of the carriers are photogenerated—near the front surface, back-junction cells require very high material quality so that carriers have sufficient time to diffuse from the front to the rear surface with the collection junctions on the rear surface. In comparison, the EWT cell maintains a current collection junction on the front surface, which is advantageous for high current collection efficiency. The EWT cell is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,468,652, Method Of Making A Back Contacted Solar Cell, to James M. Gee, incorporated here in full. The various other back contact cell designs have also been discussed in numerous technical publications.
In addition to U.S. Pat. No. 5,468,652, two other U.S. patents on which Gee is a co-inventor disclose methods of module assembly and lamination using back-contact solar cells, U.S. Pat. No. 5,951,786, Laminated Photovoltaic Modules Using Back-Contact Solar Cells, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,972,732, Method of Monolithic Module Assembly. Both patents disclose methods and aspects that may be employed with the invention disclosed herein, and are incorporated by reference as if set forth in full. U.S. Pat. No. 6,384,316, Solar Cell and Process of Manufacturing the Same, discloses an alternative back-contact cell design, but employing MWT, wherein the holes or vias are spaced comparatively far apart, with metal contacts on the front surface to help conduct current to the rear surface, and further in which the holes are lined with metal.
Eikelboom et al., “Conductive Adhesives for Interconnection of Busbarless Emitter Wrap-Through Solar Cells on a Structured Metal Foil”, presented at the 17th European Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference, Munich, Germany, 22-26 Oct. 2001, discloses a process for making solar cells using a co-fired Ag/Al-alloyed p-type contact and illustrated in
A critical issue for any back-contact silicon solar cell is developing a low-cost process sequence that also electrically isolates the negative and positive polarity grids and junctions. The technical issue includes patterning of the doped layers (if present), passivation of the surface between the negative and positive contact regions, and application of the negative and positive polarity contacts.
The present invention is a method for making a back-contact solar cell, the method comprising the steps of providing a semiconductor substrate comprising a first conductivity type, providing a diffusion comprising an opposite conductivity type on the rear surface, depositing a dielectric layer on the rear surface, forming a plurality of holes extending from a front surface of the substrate to a rear surface of the substrate, removing the diffusion and dielectric layer from one or more regions of the rear surface, creating one or more contacts comprising the first conductivity type in each of the one or more regions, disposing a first conductive grid on the rear surface in electrical contact with the contacts; and disposing a second conductive grid on the rear surface in electrical contact with the diffusion in the holes. The creating step preferably comprises doping the substrate with a dopant which preferably comprises an element selected from the group consisting of boron and aluminum. The first conductive grid preferably does not comprise the dopant. The step of providing a diffusion preferably comprises exposing the substrate to a gas which preferably comprises POCl3. The first conductive grid is preferably interdigitated with the second conductive grid.
Optionally the depositing step comprises depositing the dielectric layer on the front surface and the creating step comprises simultaneously providing a second diffusion comprising an opposite conductivity type on the interior surfaces of the holes. The method optionally further comprises the step of constructing a passivation layer on one or both of the front surface and the rear surface, preferably using a method selected from the group consisting of oxidizing the surface or depositing the passivation layer on the surface.
The method optionally further comprises the step of coating the interior surfaces of the holes and the one or more region with a plated metallic contact layer preferably comprising nickel, wherein the coating step is performed after the creating step and prior to the disposing steps. The contact layer is preferably plated using electroless plating. This method optionally further comprises the step of providing a second diffusion after the removing step, the second diffusion comprising an opposite conductivity type on the interior surfaces of the holes and the one or more regions, and wherein the creating step comprises overdoping the second diffusion.
This invention is also a back contact solar cell made according to any of the preceding methods. This invention is further a back contact solar cell comprising a plated layer comprising a metal, preferably comprising nickel, the layer disposed between one or more doped regions of the substrate and one ore more conductive grids, wherein the conductive grids do not comprise the metal.
This invention is also a back contact solar cell and method for making a back-contact solar cell comprising the steps of providing a semiconductor substrate comprising a first conductivity type, depositing a patterned dielectric layer on the rear surface, providing a diffusion comprising an opposite conductivity type on open portions of the rear surface not covered by the dielectric layer, disposing a metal on the open portions and on the dielectric layer adjacent to the open portions, firing the metal. The depositing step preferably comprises screen printing the dielectric layer. The step of providing a diffusion preferably comprises using a gas selected from the group consisting of POCl3 and PH3. The metal preferably comprises a dopant of the first conductivity type. The disposing step preferably comprises screen printing a paste comprising the metal. The firing step preferably comprises spiking the diffusion in the open portions with the metal.
An object of the present invention is to provide a rear surface contact structure for back-contact solar cells comprising wide grid lines for increased conduction combined with a minimum of p-type contact areas and a maximum of n-type diffusion, or n+ emitter, for increased efficiency.
An advantage of the present invention is that it provides for manufacturing processes with fewer, more economical process steps that produce high efficiency solar cells.
Other objects, advantages and novel features, and further scope of applicability of the present invention will be set forth in part in the detailed description to follow, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, and in part will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon examination of the following, or may be learned by practice of the invention. The objects and advantages of the invention may be realized and attained by means of the instrumentalities and combinations particularly pointed out in the appended claims.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated into and form a part of the specification, illustrate one or more embodiments of the present invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention. The drawings are only for the purpose of illustrating one or more preferred embodiments of the invention and are not to be construed as limiting the invention. The drawings and their components are not necessarily to scale. In the drawings:
The invention disclosed herein provides for improved methods and processes for fabrication of back-contact solar cells, particularly methods and processes providing for more economical fabrication. It is to be understood that while a number of different discrete methods are disclosed, one of skill in the art could combine or vary two or more methods, thereby providing an alternative additional method of fabrication. It is also to be understood that while the figures and example process sequences describe fabrication of back-contact emitter-wrap-through cells, these process sequences can be used for fabrication of other back-contact cell structures such as MWT, MWA, or back-junction solar cells.
The processes of the present invention preferably use a laser to pattern the p-type contact (laser scribing) rather than a printed (i.e. screen-printed) diffusion barrier material applied in the desired pattern. Patterning a screen-printed diffusion barrier provides a low-quality interface, e.g. one with poor passivation, with the silicon wafer. By laser scribing the contact areas, a deposition process such as evaporation or CVD may be used to deposit the diffusion barrier, allowing the interface with the silicon to be “tuned” as desired. Also, in standard screen-printing processes, the diffusion barrier is typically printed before the phosphorous or POCl3 diffusion is performed. By depositing the diffusion barrier after the phosphorous diffusion, the emitter can extend all of the way to the p-contact groove, greatly improving the efficiency of the cell. Other methods of scribing or direct patterning, for example dicing saw, diamond scribing, or HF etchant paste applied by screen or ink-jet printing, may optionally be used.
There are several other advantages to using a laser for patterning the p-type contact. First, laser patterning can achieve much finer geometries and resolutions, preferably 1 to 100 μm, with a most preferable range of 10 to 100 μm, than can be easily achieved with screen printing, especially for the rough surfaces typical of silicon solar cells. These finer geometries mean that the efficiency of the EWT cell can be maximized by minimizing the area of the p-type contact. Second, the registration tolerances are relaxed for the printing steps. The Ag grids (preferably 100 to 1000 μm wide and nominally 400-μm wide) need only to cover the laser-drilled holes and laser-scribed grooves (10 to 100 μm and nominally 50 μm wide), leaving a large tolerance for error in the alignment. In contrast, the all-printed sequence requires alignment of the Ag grid into a diffusion barrier opening of preferably 150 to 300 μm and nominally 200 μm. This number is much closer to the Ag grid width and leaves relatively little room for error.
Sequences using either Al alloy or boron diffusion for doping the p-type contacts are disclosed herein; however, other p-type dopants may be used, including but not limited to Ga and In. Similarly, any n-type dopant may be used alternatively to phosphorus. For the present invention, some type of heavy p-type doping in the p-type contacts is preferably used in order to electrically isolate the p-type contact from the n-type diffusion on the rear surface. The dominant processing issue is shunting of the n-type and p-type diffusions at their junction, which could also be affected by the p-type metallization.
The boron preferably simultaneously diffuses into the wafer, creating p++ layer 26. One advantage of using a POCl3 diffusion rather than a phosphorous paste in the holes is that the POCl3 gas provides a more uniform diffusion within the holes. The solar cell at this stage is depicted in
The contact layer may optionally comprise a high-quality metallization deposited by thin-film deposition techniques, including but not limited to sputtering, CVD, or evaporation. These techniques deposit very thin layers of pure metals with ideal properties for contacting silicon. The problem is that thin-film deposition is relatively costly and requires a separate patterning step. A process using thin-film and plated metallization for back-contact silicon solar cells has been described by Mulligan, et al. (U.S. Patent Application, “Metal contact structure for solar cell and method of manufacture,” US 2004/0200520 A1, Oct. 14, 2001).
The contact layer may alternatively comprise nickel plating. Sintered Ni contacts have much lower contact resistance than fired Ag-paste contacts, and can be easily deposited selectively on exposed Si surfaces by electroless Ni plating. The Ni typically undergoes a solid-state reaction to form a nickel silicide during the sintering step, in which case the nickel silicide is the contact layer. The Ni contact may have fewer problems with shunting of the junction than fired Ag contacts. Further, by optimizing the plating process, the Ni can be prevented from depositing on the existing SiN (or other dielectric) layer. Electroless Ni is used in some silicon solar cell fabrication sequences that entirely use plated metallizations. An additional advantage is that the Ni plating improves the interface so that Ag, Al, or other paste may be used to form a contact with higher integrity.
One of the problems with electroless plating for the all-plated metallization cell technologies is that electroless plating is very slow. However, the present invention requires only a thin layer, preferably approximately 10 to 1000 nm (and most preferably approximately 100 nm) thick, for the electrical contact. A screen-printed Ag grid is then preferably applied for the conductor. For this application, a Ag paste that fires at a low temperature is preferably used to minimize metallurgical interaction with the Ni contact and the underlying silicon. A screen-printed Cu grid may alternatively be used, although because Cu tends to oxidize more easily than Ag, it is preferably capped with a non-oxidizing metal or oxidation inhibitor. Alternatively, a base metal, such as Ni, can be printed and the conductivity then increased by plating (electroless or electroplating) a more conductive metal, including but not limited to Ag or Cu.
When nickel plating is incorporated into the previous boron-diffused EWT process in order to make nickel plated contacts, after the HF etch in step 10 the following steps are preferably taken:
Nickel plated contacts may also be used in conjunction with an Al-alloyed p-type junction, as illustrated in
In the methods of the present invention, there is a potential shunt where the heavy p+ contact diffusion contacts the rear-surface n+ diffusion; see for example
Another method for separating the p+ and n+ regions to avoid shunting preferably comprises the following steps:
1. Drill holes in a p-type silicon wafer, preferably using a laser.
2. Etch and clean the wafer. This step may comprise an alkaline etch, or optionally comprises an acidic etch to texture the front surface for improved absorption.
3. Diffuse the surface of the wafer to form n-type layer 104, preferably using POCl3 or another n-type source, and preferably in the range of approximately 45-140 ohm/sq.
4. Etch diffusion glass.
5. Scribe openings for the p-contacts on rear surface using a laser, etching paste, a mechanical method, or the like. Preferably, this step does not introduce defects into the silicon, because there is no opportunity to etch them off.
6. Deposit patterned dielectric layer 106 preferably comprising SiN, an oxide of titanium or tantalum, or the like on the front and back surfaces of the wafer, preferably ranging from approximately 40 nm to 150 nm in thickness. This layer preferably acts as a metallization and diffusion barrier on the rear surface as well as an optical coating on both the front and rear surfaces. This layer is preferably not deposited on or in the holes. The solar cell at this stage is shown in
7. Perform a second scribe, directly aligned and centered with the first scribe, but having a smaller diameter or width. The solar cell at this stage is shown in
8. Screen print p-type dopant paste 124, such as a boron-containing paste, in the scribed area and form p+ contact layer 126 in the second scribed opening by diffusion or alloying. The solar cell at this stage is shown in
9. Etch boron glass or other p-type source if necessary.
10. Metallize p grids 128 and n grids 118 with conductor paste or metal plating. The solar cell at this stage is shown in
This method results in the p+ region, which is formed approximately only on the small portion of the wafer created by the second scribing step, being separated from the n+ region on the rear surface by that portion of the dielectric layer located within the first scribe.
Another preferred process of the present invention does not use a separate patterning step for the p-type contact. Rather, the p-type contact region is defined at the same time as the patterning is performed for the phosphorus diffusion. This process preferably comprises the following steps:
Back-contact EWT cells may also be fabricated with processes similar to a buried-contact cell fabrication sequence using self-doping metallizations. Care must be taken to ensure that the self-doping metallizations fill the grooves and holes so that series resistance is not a problem. One example of such a process is as follows:
1. Etch and clean the Si wafer;
2. Laser scribe n-type grooves and drill holes on rear surface;
3. Light (80 to 120 ohms/sq) phosphorus diffusion;
4. HF etch to remove phosphorus glass from diffusion process;
5. Silicon nitride deposition by, for example, PECVD or low-pressure chemical vapor deposition (LPCVD);
6. Laser scribe p-type grooves or pits on rear surface;
7. Fill n-type grooves/hole and p-type grooves with n-type and p-type self-doping metallizations, respectively; and
8. Co-fire metallizations.
In any of the above embodiments, the large areas of SiN or other dielectric on the rear surface enables the contact lines, which are preferably interdigitated, to be as wide as possible (in order to carry more current) without actually contacting the silicon wafer. They also enable the maximization of n+ emitter while minimizing the area of the p-type contacts, thereby increasing carrier collection efficiency. The percentage of the total rear surface area occupied by the p-type contacts
Further, in all of the embodiments herein, numerous methods or variations may be used, including but not limited to the following. The vias can be formed using laser drilling, although alternative methods such as chemical or plasma etching, thermomigration, etc. may be used. Some of these methods are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/880,190, entitled “Emitter Wrap-Through Back Contact Solar Cells on Thin Silicon Wafers”, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/606,487, entitled “Fabrication of Back-Contacted Solar Cells Using Thermomigration to Create Conductive Vias”, and International Patent Application Serial No. PCT/US04/20370, entitled “Back-Contacted Solar Cells with Integral Conductive Vias and Method of Making”, all of which are incorporated herein by reference. Etching paste may be screen printed to perform fine patterning. Borosilicate glass or another p-type dopant source may be used to form the p+ junction. The choice of size of the scribed grooves must be balanced between reducing the contact area and minimizing the recombination velocity. Finally, a selective emitter process may also be utilized, where the diffusion is lighter on the front surface than in the vias or on the back surface. This can be accomplished, for example, by screen printing a porous SiO2 layer on the front surface, which retards phosphorus diffusion on the front surface while the holes and rear surface are heavily diffused, and is etched off by, for example, HF. This can alternatively be accomplished by loading wafers with their front surfaces face to face in a single slot (i.e., double loading) in the POCl3 furnace, which reduces the diffusion on the touching surfaces.
All these sequences can be used for making back-junction in addition to EWT cells very simply—the laser simply scribes pits or grooves rather than drill holes for the n-type contact. A back-junction solar cell has both the negative- and positive-polarity current-collection junctions on the rear surface. These cells require high quality material so that the photogenerated carriers absorbed near the front surface can diffuse across the width of the device to be collected at the junctions on the rear of the device.
Minimizing the Series Resistance in an Interdigitated Back Contact Grid Pattern
Because back-contact silicon solar cells have both the negative-polarity and positive-polarity contacts and current-collection grids on the back surface, the negative-polarity and positive-polarity grids must be electrically isolated from one another. The grids must also collect the current to bonding pads or busbars. Metallic ribbons are typically attached to the bonding pads or busbars in order to connect the solar cells into an electrical circuit.
There are two geometries for the grids in a back-contact cell. In an “interdigitated back contact” (IBC) geometry, the negative- and positive-conductivity type grids form interdigitated comb-like structures (
The second geometry for the grids in a back-contact cell uses a multilevel metallization (
The present invention provides two embodiments for minimizing the series resistance of the preferred IBC grid pattern (with the bonding pads at the edge of the cell) in an interdigitated back contact grid pattern of a back-contact silicon solar cell.
In a first embodiment, the grid lines are made with a tapered width—such that the width is increased along the direction of current flow until it reaches the edge of the cell. This reduces the series resistance at a constant grid coverage fraction because the cross-sectional area of the grid increases at the same rate that the current carried by the grid increases. A preferred embodiment of the tapered width pattern in both positive-polarity current-collection grid 510 and negative-polarity current-collection grid 520 is shown in
In general, the degree of tapering may be determined either empirically or by calculation, to determine an optimal tapering. Additionally, the metal coverage fraction and the spacing between same-polarity grids may similarly be varied. In a simulation of an IBC cell with typical properties, the series resistance of an IBC grid was calculated for a 125-mm by 125-mm cell. The spacing between same-polarity grids was selected to be 2 mm, and the metal coverage fraction was selected to be 40%. The grid lines had a width of 400 μm for the constant-width IBC geometry, while the grid lines increased from 200 to 600 μm for the tapered geometry. The series resistance was 36% less for the tapered versus the constant-width IBC geometry. Note that other tapers may be used as required; for example, the grid line might taper from 250 to 550 μm wide.
In a second embodiment, the grid resistance can be reduced by making the grid lines thicker. The thickness of screen-printed Ag paste grids is limited by the physical properties of the paste and screen. The preferred geometry for the IBC grid permitting edge collection (
Alternatively, many metals can be plated via electro- or electroless plating. Cu and Ag are particularly advantageous in that both metals can be readily soldered to and have excellent electrical conductivity. Another advantage of plated grid lines is reduced stress in the completed cell. A thin printed Ag line may preferably be used since the final conductivity will be determined by the subsequent metal buildup step. Ag is fired at a high temperature (generally above 700° C.), so keeping this layer thin reduces stress from the high firing temperature. In addition, plating is generally performed at low temperatures (<100° C.). The grid thickness thus can be increased at a lower temperature, thereby introducing less stress to the completed cell.
The preceding examples can be repeated with similar success by substituting the generically or specifically described reactants and/or operating conditions of this invention for those used in the preceding examples. In particular, one of skill in the art will recognize that certain of the process steps may be modified, their order changed, or additional steps added, without deviating from the scope of the invention.
Although the invention has been described in detail with particular reference to these preferred embodiments, other embodiments can achieve the same results. Variations and modifications of the present invention will be obvious to those skilled in the art and it is intended to cover all such modifications and equivalents. The entire disclosures of all references, applications, patents, and publications cited above, and of the corresponding applications, are hereby incorporated by reference.
This application claims priority to and the benefit of the filing of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/607,984, entitled “Improved Process and Fabrication Methods for Emitter Wrap Through Back Contact Solar Cells,” filed on Sep. 7, 2004, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/707,648, entitled “Further Improved Process and Fabrication Methods for Emitter Wrap Through Back Contact Solar Cells,” filed on Aug. 11, 2005. This application is also a continuation-in-part application of the following U.S. Patent Applications, all of which were filed on Feb. 3, 2005: Ser. No. 11/050,185, entitled “Back-Contact Solar Cells and Methods for Fabrication”; Ser. No. 11/050,182, entitled “Buried-Contact Solar Cells With Self-Doping Contacts”; and Ser. No. 11/050,184, entitled “Contact Fabrication of Emitter Wrap-Through Back Contact Silicon Solar Cells”, which applications claim the benefit of the filing of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/542,390, entitled “Fabrication of Back-Contact Silicon Solar Cells”, filed on Feb. 5, 2004, and of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/542,454, entitled “Process for Fabrication of Buried-Contact Cells Using Self-Doping Contacts”, filed on Feb. 5, 2004. The specifications and claims of all said applications are incorporated herein by reference as if set forth in full.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60607984 | Sep 2004 | US | |
60707648 | Aug 2005 | US | |
60542454 | Feb 2004 | US | |
60542390 | Feb 2004 | US | |
60542454 | Feb 2004 | US | |
60542390 | Feb 2004 | US | |
60542454 | Feb 2004 | US | |
60542390 | Feb 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11050185 | Feb 2005 | US |
Child | 11220927 | Sep 2005 | US |
Parent | 11050182 | Feb 2005 | US |
Child | 11220927 | Sep 2005 | US |
Parent | 11050184 | Feb 2005 | US |
Child | 11220927 | Sep 2005 | US |