1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a solar cell having an n-doped semiconductor substrate, in particular made of silicon, having base regions on the front side, a finger-like base contact structure applied to the front side, base contact paths on the back side, and through-connections (vias) which connect the finger-like contact structure to the contact paths, and a method for manufacturing same.
2. Description of Related Art
Solar cells having contact fingers on the front side which are connected via laser-bored, metal-filled holes to solderable contact paths (busbars) on the back side have been known for quite some time (Patent Abstracts of Japan, Publication No. 58-039071 (1983); Patent Abstracts of Japan, Publication No. 04223378 (1992)). These solar cells, referred to as metal wrap through (MWT) cells, are provided on p-doped base material which is usually multicrystalline, and which has an emitter that is produced on the front side by phosphorus diffusion (F. Clement et al., 23rd EUPVSEC, Valencia (2008), paper 2DV.1.10). The same as in standard solar cells, the back side is covered with aluminum paste over a large surface between the back side emitter busbars and the base contact solder points in order to form a so-called back surface field (BSF) and to apply metal plating to the back side.
For example, published European patent document EP 0985233 B1 or published international patent application document WO/1998/054763 describes an MWT cell as well as n- and p-doped wafers as starting material, having a homogeneous emitter on the front side, in the through-connections, and in regions of the back side around the through-connections. The areas where the base contacts are to be subsequently situated on the back side are covered by a masking layer during the POCl3 diffusion of the emitter, the masking layer being subsequently removed before the back side metal plating is applied.
In addition to passivation of the emitter, passivated rear side BSF having local contacts for so-called passivated emitter and rear (local) contacts (PERC) cells have also been proposed in the past (A. W. Blakers et al., Appl. Phys. Lett., 55 (1989), pp.1363-1365; G. Agostinelli et al., 20th European Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference (2005), Barcelona, p. 647, P. Choulat et al., 22nd European Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference (2007), Milan).
The following disadvantages of known MWT cells have been identified:
Standard MWT cells have the emitter on the front side, and for a connection to the emitter busbars on the back side must have closed emitter doping at the walls of the holes, which are usually laser-bored holes, to prevent shunting to the base material. Therefore, the holes must be perfectly lined with the aid of diffusion from the gas phase, using POCl3 (for p material) or BBr3 (for n material), for example.
In addition, this makes it difficult to also insulate the emitter doping in a strip in the region of the provided back-side emitter busbars with respect to the adjacent back-side doping (BSF). Heretofore, as mentioned above, the back-side BSF has been provided by Al screen printing and sintering, i.e., by overcompensating for the phosphorus doping previously introduced into both surfaces. Although the back-side emitter strips are left exposed during the printing, the insulation between the p+ regions and n+ regions must be subsequently provided, for example by a laser groove around the emitter busbars.
An object of the present invention is to provide an improved solar cell which is contacted completely from the back side, and which may be reliably manufactured with high yield and which offers flexible options with regard to specific contacting and passivation, as well as a corresponding manufacturing method.
A novel solar cell structure and a process step sequence (as an example) for manufacturing a corresponding solar cell are proposed, the solar cell containing a full-surface aluminum emitter on the back side of the n-silicon wafer, and FSF contact fingers on the front side which via laser boreholes are connected to solder contact paths or solder contact path segments on the back side, and which are situated in recesses in the otherwise full-surface emitter and in the otherwise full-surface aluminum plating or the otherwise full-surface dielectric passivation layer having local through-connections in the otherwise full-surface aluminum plating.
In advantageous embodiments, the proposed novel MWT cell concept provides that
a) the starting material is preferably, but not necessarily, a monocrystalline n-silicon wafer having any desired shape;
b) in contrast to all concepts according to the related art, the emitter is situated on the back side of an n-type wafer; i.e., the front side and the hole inner walls have an n+n transition instead of a pn transition;
c) the p+ emitter doping is provided by Al diffusion from a thin swelling layer or swelling layer sequence produced by vapor deposition or sputtering;
d) an Al-based thin-layer metal plating of the emitter on the back side is optionally applied directly over the entire surface, or with the aid of passivation with local contacting of the emitter (PERC);
e) solderable (Ag) contact surfaces may be applied on the Al-based thin-layer metal plating of the (passivated or unpassivated) emitter and in the regions of the BSF left exposed in the emitter;
f) the insulation between the back-side emitter and the BSF doping regions passing through the vias on the back side has already been provided during the production process, so that subsequent laser groove insulation is no longer necessary.
The proposed MWT solar cell structure in its preferred embodiments, in particular having an aluminum-diffused p+ emitter on the back side of an n-doped wafer, which on the front side has a standard silver finger H grid on a phosphorus-based n+ doping having silicon nitride passivation or an antireflection coating (ARC), the H grid in turn being connected on the back side, via laser-bored holes (vias) filled with silver paste, to busbars which may also be composed of numerous busbar dots situated linearly one behind the other, has the following advantages:
1) n-base-doped wafers have a longer lifetime of the minority charge carriers (in the present case: holes), and therefore allow an MWT cell design having back-side emitters for the present customary wafer thicknesses of 180 μm±20 μm.
2) Since the walls of the vias, the same as the front side, have only one n+n high-low transition (unlike the standard MWT cell on p wafers having a front-side n+ emitter and n+ emitter doping in the vias), there is no risk of shunting and j02 increase in the vias; the reason is that if the hole metal plating is to contact through the highly doped n+ layer, the contact still remains in the base polarity region (n).
3) Pastes 1 and 2 may be the same due to the fact that the back-side base contact surface regions, the holes, and the front side are n+-doped, and the silver pastes may contact without risk through the ARC, and on the back side, through the n+ layer (see item 2), even without the ARC.
4) Due to the fact that the back-side passivation layer is deposited only after firing of the front-side silver fingers, the back-side base contact surfaces, and the hole metal plating, the back-side passivation layer does not have to withstand high-temperature treatments at T>800° C.; the highest temperature that this layer must subsequently withstand is the low sintering temperature of back-side emitter contact surface paste 3 (<560° C.), resulting in better chances of successful back-side passivation.
5) Due to the fact that the aluminum emitter doping is structured in such a way that the back-side FSF busbar regions may be produced in narrower strips or dots than those which have been previously left exposed in the emitter, no laser groove-based insulation of the p+ and n+ areas is necessary at the conclusion of the cell manufacturing process.
In particular, the measures known from the related art for providing selective doping beneath the silver fingers on the front side have not been included in the description, without ruling out that these measures may be used in the cell according to the present invention in order to improve the blue light sensitivity on the front side.
Starting with a roughly purified n-silicon wafer, the following process steps (as an example) result in one preferred specific embodiment of the described cell concept.
1) saw damage etching and (optional) RCA purification of the wafer surfaces (
2) coating the back side with an aluminum-containing swelling layer or swelling layer sequence (
3) removing the swelling layer/swelling layer sequence around the subsequent base busbar regions, preferably by masked etching; the etched-out region (
4) depositing an etch-resistant cover layer sequence, which is dielectric with respect to KOH, on the back-side aluminum-containing swelling layer/swelling layer sequence (
5) opening the dielectric insulation layer in the region of the subsequent base busbars, preferably by masked etching or by etch paste printing, these openings having width d2<d1 defining the structure of the subsequent n+ doping and of the base contact surfaces to be printed thereon (
6) producing the vias in the middle of the exposed regions having width d2, by laser bombardment (
7) texture etching the front side, the hole inner walls, and the base busbar regions of the back side exposed in step 5, using alkaline etching solution and etching away the topmost KOH-resistant layer of the cover layer sequence (
8) high-temperature diffusion of the Al emitter beneath the dielectric cover layer, preferably at T>1000° C. in an inert gas atmosphere (
9) phosphorus diffusion at T<1000° C. for providing the n+ doping on the front side, the hole inner walls, and the base busbar regions of the back side exposed in step 5 (
10) back-etching the phosphorus silicate glass (PSG) layer, the back-side cover layer, and the remainders of the swelling layer or remainders of the swelling layer sequence for exposing the back-side emitter and the FSF, on the front side and in places on the back side, in suitable wet chemical baths or in suitable plasma (
11) depositing the front-side passivation/antireflection layer, preferably by PECVD of silicon nitride, either directly on the semiconductor surface or on a thin oxide which has been previously deposited by oxidation or coating; however, any other double layer composed of a suitable passivation layer, for example amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) or silicon carbide (SiCx), and a suitable antireflection layer, is also possible (
12) printing the back-side base contact surfaces with a suitable first silver-containing paste, with subsequent drawing into the laser-bored holes (vias) and drying of the paste (
13) printing and drying of the front-side finger structure, using a second silver-containing paste which contacts the first silver-containing paste in the holes in the region of the vias; mutual sintering of the two pastes with firing through the front-side antireflection-passivation layer (sequence) (
14) optional: full-surface deposition of a back-side passivation layer, for example amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) or aluminum oxide or aluminum fluoride, whose passivation action is specifically tailored to the p+ emitter (
15) optional: structuring the optional back-side passivation layer by masked etching or by etch paste printing; providing local openings for the contact formation on the emitter and exposing the base contact surfaces around the vias, which have already been printed in step 12 using the first Ag-containing paste (
16) full-surface metal plating of the back side directly on the semiconductor or on the optional emitter passivation, and in the windows opened therein in step 15, preferably by vapor deposition or sputtering of aluminum-containing material (
17) structuring the back-side metal plating by masked etching in the chlorine-containing plasma or by etch paste printing; base contacts in particular are exposed (
18) optional: covering the structured back-side metal plating with a dielectric protective layer (
19) optional: local opening of the optional back-side cover layer from step 18, i.e., in particular in the region of the base busbar contact surfaces (
20) The lateral shapes of the openings in the back-side metal plating from step 18 and of the openings in the optional protective layer from step 19 may be different: either
21) printing and drying a third silver-containing (low-temperature) paste in regions of the emitter contact surfaces in the opened regions from step 19 (
The execution of the present invention is not limited to this example, and is also possible in numerous modifications which are within the scope of procedures carried out by those skilled in the art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 054 167.2 | Oct 2008 | DE | national |
10 2009 031 151.3 | Jun 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/063341 | 10/13/2009 | WO | 00 | 6/30/2011 |