The invention generally relates to thin film solar cells and, more particularly, the invention relates to a structure for use in thin film solar cells.
Nowadays, energy shortage and environment disruption like global warming have become worldwide issues due to the consumption of fossil fuel. Among techniques that utilize new energy sources, the solar cell is considered to be very promising and has already achieved wide application for space and terrestrial power supply. However, most solar cells are based on silicon wafers. The cost of this technique, which is dominated by the starting material, is difficult to be reduced.
Thin film silicon solar cells based on inexpensive substrates are designed to reduce the silicon consumption by 100 fold so that the materials cost becomes negligible. However, as the film becomes thinner, the absorption of photons with long wavelengths gets weaker. This problem is severe especially for silicon because of its indirect bandgap, thus the power conversion efficiency is decreased. To overcome this limit, many different light trapping schemes have been proposed to increase the optical path length in thin film silicon. For example, metals are deposited on the backside to reflect light back into the absorptive layer. Another example is to utilize chemicals or plasma to etch the front or back side of solar cells, generating rough thereby antireflective or scattering surfaces. However, most of these methods have their own limitations. For some of them, the parameters that effect the formation of the structures (e.g., surface roughness, height of the texturing, periodicity of the texturing) are difficult to control, making it impossible to optimize light trapping structures, while for others the fabrication methods are too expensive to be scaled to large area applications.
In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, a method of manufacturing a photovoltaic cell includes providing an active absorption layer, forming a pseudo-periodic grating adjacent to the active absorption layer, and forming a reflector adjacent to the pseudo-periodic grating. In related embodiments, the reflector may be a distributed Bragg reflector. Forming the pseudo-periodic grating may include forming an aluminum layer adjacent to the absorption layer, and anodizing the aluminum layer in the presence of an acid to establish a pseudo-periodic structure of aluminum oxide. Forming the pseudo-periodic grating may further include forming a grating layer adjacent to the pseudo-periodic structure and then removing the pseudo-periodic structure, so that the grating layer forms the pseudo-periodic grating. The grating layer may be made of silicon, a transparent conductive oxide material and/or materials with high refractive indices. Forming the pseudo-periodic grating may further include removing at least some portion of the active absorption layer in pore areas of the pseudo-periodic structure and then removing the pseudo-periodic structure so that a region of the active absorption layer forms the pseudo-periodic grating. Embodiments may include a device having a photovoltaic cell produced according to the method.
In accordance with another embodiment of the invention, a photovoltaic cell includes an active absorption layer, a pseudo-periodic grating adjacent to the active absorption layer, and a reflector adjacent to the pseudo-periodic grating. In related embodiments, the reflector may be a distributed Bragg reflector. The pseudo-periodic grating may be made of silicon, aluminum oxide, such as porous aluminum oxide, a transparent conductive oxide material and/or materials with high refractive indices.
In accordance with another embodiment of the invention, a method of manufacturing a photovoltaic cell includes providing an active absorption layer, forming an aluminum layer adjacent to the absorption layer, anodizing the aluminum layer in the presence of an acid to form a porous aluminum oxide layer, and forming a reflector adjacent to the porous aluminum oxide layer. In related embodiments, the reflector may be a distributed Bragg reflector. The method may further include forming a grating layer adjacent to the porous aluminum oxide layer and then removing the porous aluminum oxide layer. The grating layer may be made of a transparent conductive oxide material, silicon, and/or materials with high refractive indices. The method may further include removing at least some portion of the active absorption layer in pore areas of the porous aluminum oxide layer and then removing the porous aluminum oxide layer. Embodiments may include a device having a photovoltaic cell produced according to the method.
The foregoing features of various embodiments of the invention will be more readily understood by reference to the following detailed description, taken with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
a-5c show scanning electron micrographs of the porous aluminum oxide layer thickness for various anodization times;
a-7c show scanning electron micrographs of the porous aluminum oxide layer pore spacing for various DC voltages;
a-9c show scanning electron micrographs of the porous aluminum oxide layer pore diameter for various pore widening times;
a-11c schematically show a process of manufacturing a photovoltaic cell according to embodiments of the present invention and
a-13c show a process of manufacturing a photovoltaic cell using the porous aluminum oxide layer as a sacrificial masking layer according to embodiments of the present invention.
Definitions. As used in this description and the accompanying claims, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated, unless the context otherwise requires:
A “pseudo-periodic” structure is a structure having irregularity in at least one of opening size and spacing between openings, while the openings nevertheless have a controllable and characterizable size distribution and a median size. A grating having a pseudo-periodic structure is herein called a “pseudo-periodic grating”. A method of forming a pseudo-periodic grating includes forming a porous aluminum oxide layer, the pores of which correspond to openings in the grating.
Various embodiments of the present invention provide a pseudo-periodic structure, and method of producing same, that may be used as a pseudo-periodic grating in a photovoltaic cell or may be used as a sacrificial patterning layer in forming the pseudo-periodic grating in a photovoltaic cell. The photovoltaic cell may include an active absorption layer, a pseudo-periodic grating formed adjacent to or in the active absorption layer, and a reflector, preferably a distributed Bragg reflector, formed adjacent to the pseudo-periodic grating. Other layers may also be used in addition to the active absorption layer, the pseudo-periodic grating, and the reflector on or between these various layers as known by those skilled in the art. The pseudo-periodic grating may be used within the photovoltaic cell to diffract the light into oblique angles. Unlike periodic gratings, the pseudo-periodic grating structure has a controlled randomness to further enhance the light trapping effect.
The pseudo-periodic grating may be fabricated by various methods, such as aluminum anodization or block copolymerization, and thus avoids expensive lithography steps and may be easily scaled to large areas. Embodiments of the present invention are capable of controlling and optimizing the pseudo-periodic grating structure, such as thickness, periodicity, and degree of randomness. Advantages include a significantly reduced cost of making the pseudo-periodic grating structure while further enhancing the performance of photovoltaic cells that may use such a structure. Details of illustrative embodiments are discussed below.
In step 110, the aluminum layer is anodized in an acidic electrolyte to produce a porous aluminum oxide layer. As known by those skilled in the art, the aluminum anodization process involves placing the aluminum film in an appropriate electrolyte and applying a voltage so that the aluminum layer is oxidized leaving an aluminum oxide film on the substrate. Depending on the anodization parameters, a predominantly porous aluminum oxide film or a barrier layer aluminum oxide film, which is not porous, may be produced. In embodiments of the present invention, a porous aluminum oxide film is formed adjacent to the substrate.
In embodiments of the present invention, the process parameters may be varied so that a porous aluminum oxide layer is formed having the desired properties, e.g., pore size, pore spacing, aluminum oxide layer thickness, etc. The process parameters may include electrolyte composition and concentration, temperature of the electrolyte bath, the voltage used for the anodization process, and the anodization time. For example, the acidic electrolyte used may be phosphoric acid, sulfuric acid, and/or citric acid with an appropriate concentration, e.g., 4 wt % concentration phosphoric acid. The electrolyte bath temperature may be maintained from about 0 to about 25° C., and preferably from about 0 to about 10° C. The thickness of the porous aluminum oxide layer may be varied depending on the anodization time. For example, as shown in
Returning to the process of
Alternatively, or additionally, the anodized sample may be subjected to another etching solution, such as an acidic solution having a different concentration and/or a different composition than the acidic electrolyte solution used for the anodization process. For example, the sample may be anodized in 4 wt % phosphoric acid and the anodized sample may be placed in 5 wt % phosphoric acid. The pore diameter may be varied depending on the time spent in the etchant. For example, as shown in
The process produces a porous aluminum oxide layer adjacent to the substrate having a hexagonal cell structure with, preferably, some degree of randomness in the pore distribution, such as shown in
which is about 380 nm. This calculated result also agrees with literature which showed that the interpore distance of the porous aluminum oxide layer is linearly proportional to the applied anodization voltage:
L=2.5V=2.5*150=375 nm (2)
As shown, the distribution of the interpore distance may be determined to be Δg=1.3 μm−1 by measuring the full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the peak. Therefore, the average spacing between pores may be about 380 nm with a range of about 310-480 nm at the FWHM. The average pore diameter was determined to be about 280 nm from the SEM image. This pseudo-periodic structure with some limited degree of randomness in the pore distribution differs from a random pattern in a surface or structure which would show a very broad, very shallow distribution with no peaks substantially discernable in the graph.
The resulting porous aluminum oxide layer may be used as a pseudo-periodic grating within a photovoltaic cell. Alternatively, the porous aluminum oxide layer may be used as a sacrificial layer for patterning subsequent layers and/or the substrate in the photovoltaic cell as will be discussed in more detail below with respect to
a-11c show a process of manufacturing a photovoltaic cell according to embodiments of the present invention. In
a-13c show a process of using the porous aluminum oxide layer as a sacrificial layer for patterning subsequent layers and/or the substrate in the photovoltaic cell. As shown in
Alternatively, or additionally, a grating layer 40 may be formed within the openings in the porous aluminum oxide layer 20, such as shown in
One or more additional porous aluminum oxide layers 20 may be formed as described above adjacent to or in the substrate 10, the reflector 25, and/or the grating layer 40. The one or more additional porous aluminum oxide layers 20 may be used within the photovoltaic cell as an additional pseudo-periodic grating or a sacrificial layer for forming additional pseudo-periodic gratings as described above.
As known by those skilled in the art, one or more photovoltaic cells may be connected together to form larger units called modules, and modules may be connected together to form even larger units called arrays, which may be interconnected together, etc. Thus, embodiments of the present invention may include a photovoltaic system having a plurality of photovoltaic cells coupled to one another.
Although the above discussion discloses various exemplary embodiments of the invention, it should be apparent that those skilled in the art can make various modifications that will achieve some of the advantages of the invention without departing from the true scope of the invention.
This patent application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/183,727 filed Jun. 3, 2009, entitled LOW COST SELF-ASSEMBLED DETERMINISTIC PSEUDO-PERIODIC STRUCTURE FOR LIGHT TRAPPING IN THIN FILM SOLAR CELLS, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61183727 | Jun 2009 | US |