The invention relates to a soldered connection between an outer surface of a semiconductor device and a preferably lamellar connector, particularly between the backside contact of a solar cell and a connector, such as, a series connector. Furthermore, the invention relates to a method for connecting a connector to an outer surface of a semiconductor device, particularly a series connector to a backside contact of a solar cell, where the semiconductor device is connected via an adhesive layer to a substrate.
Known soldered connections between a connector and an amorphous silicon thin film solar cell are characterized by an irreproducible adhesion of the soldering joint.
Investigations with thin film solar cells have frequently yielded a tear off image where the amorphous silicon layer peels from the TCO adhesive layer (Transparent Conductive Oxide). However, it would be a misinterpretation to assume that the adhesive strength on the amorphous silicon layer on the TCO layer would be inhomogeneous to such a high degree. Consequently, corresponding tear off images are explained not by a poor, inhomogeneous layer adhesion, but by the peeling of the layer, which is caused by the substantially more bending resistant soldering joint, in such a way that the tear off force is concentrated on a very small area on the margin of the tear off location, so that very small forces already lead to high surface forces.
WO-A-2006/128203 relates to an electrical connection element which is made of an electrical conductor presenting a structured surface, and of an electrically conducting coating. A corresponding connection element can be used for connecting solar cells. For this purpose, a connection element which presents a solderable coating is soldered to the solar cell.
The object of DE-A-36 12 269 is a method for the application of a connecting conductor to the connection contact of a photovoltaic solar cell.
US-A-2007/0085201 relates to a power semiconductor device in the flat conductor technology with a vertical current path. A connection element is connected to a power semiconductor chip via an electrically conducting film which also connects the connection element electrically to an internal flat conductor.
The present invention is based on the problem of further developing a soldered connection as well as a method for its manufacture in such a way that tensile forces acting on the connector do not lead to the detachment of the semiconductor device from the substrate or from the adhesive layer present between the substrate and the semiconductor device.
According to the invention, the problem is solved by a soldered connection of the type mentioned in the introduction, where, from the outer surface of the semiconductor device, a support location starts, which made of a solderable material and which is in contact with the outer surface via a contact surface A, on or in which support location the conductor is soldered while maintaining a separation a with a≧10 μm from the outer surface, and/or the separation b between the margin of the contact surface between the support surface and the outer surface of the semiconductor device, and the entry of the connector in the support location or the contact beginning between them, is b≧50 μm. Separation b here means that the margin of the contact surface extends at least at a separation of the center of a circle with radius b from the entry or contact beginning, because tensile forces can in principle be distributed over any radial directions.
As a result, a tear off force acting on the connector is uniformly distributed over a large surface.
For example, if the adhesive strength of the semiconductor device on the intermediate layer is 20 N/mm2, then, if the support location presents a surface area of 40 mm2, a theoretical tear off force of 400 N can be generated, to detach the semiconductor device from a substrate, such as, an adhesive layer. However, before these tear off forces are reached, the connectors that are usually used with solar cells tear. Typical values are between 60 N and 100 N. However, the prerequisite with regard to considerations pertinent to this subject is that the support location keeps adhering to the outer surface, that is, it must not become detached.
In particular, it is provided that the connector always maintains in its area that is connected to the support location the separation a, which should be between 20 μm and 500 μm, particularly between 100 μm and 200 μm. Independently thereof, the separation a must be maintained at least in the area in which the connector is connected in the marginal area to the support location, or in which the connector is immersed in the support location, or in which the contact beginning of the connector to the support location extends. The latter applies particularly to the case where the connector is soldered to the support location.
The separation b should particularly be greater than 100 μm, particularly between 300 μm and 3 mm.
Moreover, the invention provides for the support location to be designed homogeneously, where a preferred thickness to be indicated is 10 μm to 500 μm, particularly in the range between 100 μm and 200 μm. Here, one should ensure that, in the area of the connector and its surroundings, the thickness of the support location does not fall below those values. Otherwise there is a risk that the peeling off starts in the layer system, that is in the area between the support location and the semiconductor device, particularly the solar cell.
By maintaining the separation a between the connector itself, that is without any solder, such as, tin layers or the like, and the outer surface of the semiconductor device on which the support location is applied, one ensures that, when high tensile forces occur, which act on the connector, the peeling is shifted into the support location, that is, the peeling does not occur on the outer surface, but in the contact area between the connector and the support location, that is between the connector and the solderable material, such as, conductive adhesive, sintered conductive paste or solder material. Below, the general term solder or solder material is used for the sake of simplicity.
However, the possibility exists to prevent peeling off, and to produce a tearing off of the connector even at high tearing forces, if, on the connector, a layer, having a thickness of 200 μm to 500 μm, of the solder material that constitutes the soldering joint is soldered, or if the connector is introduced or pressed in a guided way into the support location during the soldering of the connector to the support location, so that the desired separations both from the outer surface of the semiconductor device and also from the outer surface of the support location are maintained. By almost soldering the connector, one achieves that, when using connectors of thickness 100 μm, the tearing off no longer occurs between the connector and the solder, instead the connector itself tears with a tear off force of approximately 60 N.
The usual connectors used for solar cells, which are made from tin-coated copper, present a width from 1 to 5 mm with the indicated thickness of 100 μm.
In particular, it is provided that the semiconductor contact or the semiconductor device itself is connected with an adhesive strength of σ[N/mm2] to a substrate, such as, an adhesive layer, that the connector is destroyable with a tear off force FB[N], and that the contact surface area A [mm2] of the support location is A≧FB/σ. Here, the adhesive strength of the semiconductor device on the substrate or adhesive layer is between 0.7 N/mm2 and 200 N/mm2, in the case of solar cells.
As solder or solder material one can consider using particularly lead-free tin, or tin with a silver content of up to 3.5 wt %, or Sn alloys with at least one metal element from the group In, Pb, Cd, Bi, Da, Ag, Cu, Si metal, Al, Mg, and Zn.
To achieve defined support location surfaces, a variant provides that the support location is delimited by a ring element made of metal which is connected by means of the solderable material to the outer surface of the semiconductor device. In this case, the surface of the ring element is part of the contact surface of the support location. Alternatively one can use for the defined delimitation of the support location on the outer surface a removable ring element which is preferably made of plastic, and which can be removed after the solidification of the support location.
In particular, the semiconductor device is an amorphous silicon thin film solar cell or a module made from amorphous silicon thin film solar cells, the thin film solar cell is connected with an adhesive strength a of 10 N/mm2≦σ40 N/mm2 via a TCO layer to the substrate, such as, a glass panel, the support location is connected via a contact surface A with A≧1 mm2, preferably 5 mm2 to 70 mm2, to the backside contact of the thin film solar cell, and the connector is soldered in the support location or on the support location at separation a from the backside contact with a≧500 μm. The support location presents particularly a contact surface area of 5 mm2 to 70 mm2.
In particular, it is provided that the contact surface A presents an approximately circular geometry with a diameter d with 5 mm≦d≦7 mm.
The semiconductor device with a wafer thickness of, for example, approximately 100 μm-600 μm can also be a crystalline silicon solar cell. Usually, when tearing off a stable soldering joint, a bending moment is applied to 100 μm to 600 μm, usually 300 μm thick silicon panel, where the panel can already break out at forces of approximately 3 N. To increase the bending moments and to achieve higher pull off forces, which result in either a detachment of the silicon panel from an adhesive layer or a rupturing of the panel itself, it is provided that the solar cell is connected to a substrate via a hard plastic layer, such as, for example, a Surlyn® layer having a thickness between 100 μm and 200 μm.
Independently thereof, the support location can also consist of at least two partial support locations, where the connector in each partial support location maintains the separation a.
A method for connecting a connector to a semiconductor device, particularly a lamellar series connector to a backside contact of a solar cell, where the semiconductor device is connected preferably via an adhesive layer to a substrate, is characterized by the process steps:
Here it is provided particularly that the solderable material is connected to the outer surface and soldered to it at a temperature TL with TL≦400° C., particularly TL≦300° C. Moreover, the connector should be soldered at a temperature TV with TV≦400° C., particularly TV≦300° C., in or on the solderable material.
To achieve a good connection by material bonding between the solderable material and the outer surface, a variant provides that, before connecting the solderable material to the outer surface, a flux is applied in the area of the contact surface to be formed.
Moreover, the possibility exists, for the purpose of achieving a defined contact surface size, that the contact surface is delimited by the free inner surface of a ring element arranged on the outer surface, which is removed after the solidification of the solderable material, such as, the solder.
The possibility also exists to introduce solderable material into the inner space of a ring element which is arranged on the outer surface and made of metal, and then connect it to the outer surface, for example, by inductive heating. In this case, the ring surface is part of the contact surface.
It is preferred to use, as semiconductor device, an amorphous silicon thin film solar cell which is connected with an adhesive strength between 10 N/mm2 and 40 N/mm2 to the substrate.
As semiconductor device, one can also use a crystalline silicon solar cell, which is connected to the substrate via a Surlyn® layer, where the thickness of the Surlyn® layer is in the range between 100 μm and 200 μm.
Moreover, it is optionally provided that, above the connector connected to the support location, solder material is applied with a thickness D1 of 200 μm≦D1≦500 μm.
However, the scope of the invention also covers the case where the connector is connected to the semiconductor device via several support locations that run along a straight line. However, in a corresponding embodiment, the following secondary condition must be satisfied, namely that, in each individual partial support location, the minimum separation between the surface of the semiconductor device and the connector within or on the partial support location is equal to or greater than a. The partial support surfaces here overall constitute the total contact surface A.
In particular in the case of partial support locations, the possibility also exists that said places are not applied directly on the surface of the semiconductor device, but on an electrically conducting material, such as, for example, a path made of tin. The minimum separation a is then obtained from the separation of the bottom side of the conductor path starting directly from the semiconductor device and the course of connector within each partial support location.
Moreover, for each external partial support location, the separation b between the margin of the conductor path viewed in the longitudinal direction of the latter, and the entry place of the connector into the partial support location, should be between 300 μm and 3 mm, particularly between 300 μm and 1 mm.
Additional details, advantages and characteristics of the invention result not only from the claims, the characteristics to be taken from them—separately and/or in combination—but also from the following description of preferred embodiments:
The figures show:
In the figures, in which fundamentally identical elements are provided with identical reference numerals, a semiconductor device shown in schematic diagrams is used to explain the teaching according to the invention, that is how to connect a connector to the semiconductor device, in such a way that the tensile forces acting on the connector do not lead to the detachment of the semiconductor device from a substrate, from which the semiconductor device starts, or detachment from an adhesive layer located between the substrate and the semiconductor device.
Thus, the figures show, purely diagrammatically, as semiconductor device, a thin film solar cell 10 made of amorphous silicon. Said cell presents a usual structure, that is, on a glass substrate 12, via a TCO layer 14 (transparent contact) as adhesive layer, a layer system forming a photoactive region and made of amorphous silicon—such as, a p-i-n structure—is arranged, referred to as layer 16 below, which in turn is covered by a backside contact 22. In the embodiment example, the backside contact 22 is made from a metal layer 18, such as, an aluminum layer, or a layer which covers the former layer and made of nickel or a nickel containing (Ni:V) layer 20, in order to allow a soldering to a connector 24 of the type indicated below. Instead of the layer consisting of aluminum, it is possible, for example, to use a silver layer or a silver containing layer as backside contact or as a layer of the latter. Furthermore, a ZnO layer should extend between the layer 16 which made of amorphous silicon and the backside contact 22. The TCO layer 14 often made of SnO2:F.
In order to connect a corresponding solar cell 10 in a module, it is necessary that the backside contact 22, which in the embodiment example made of the layers 18 and 20, is connected to the connector 24, which is usually a lamellar series connector made of tin-coated copper with a thickness of 100 μm-200 μm and a width of 1 mm to 5 mm.
To prevent that tensile forces acting on the series connector 24 result in the peeling off of a layer, for example, the silicon layer 16 from the TCO layer 14, it is provided, according to the invention, that, on the backside contact 22, that is its outer surface 23, a support location 26 consisting of solder material is applied, and connected to the backside contact 22, where the solder place 26 according to
The solder material or solderable material can also be a conductive adhesive or a sintered paste, particularly in the case of thin layer or wafer solar cells that are not based on amorphous silicon.
By applying the Sn lump on the backside contact 22, one achieves that, in the case where tensile forces act on the connector 24, a peeling off in the support location 26 or tearing of the connector 24 occurs, without damage to the photoactive layer 16 occurring. In other words, a tear off place is shifted into the area of the Sn lump, in order to avoid compromising the durability of the thin film solar cell 10.
As a result of the support location 26 or the Sn lump, any forces acting on the series connector 22 are necessarily distributed over a larger surface, that is, the contact surface A between the support location 26 and the outer surface 23 of the backside contact 22. For example, if the adhesive strength a of the layer 16 made of amorphous silicon with respect to the TCO layer 14 is 20 N/mm2, then, in the case of a contact surface A of the support location 26 on the backside contact 22 with A=1 mm2, tear off forces of 20 N can be applied, without any damage to the silicon layer 16 occurring. If the contact surface A is designed to be, for example, 100 mm2, then tear off forces of 2000 N can occur without causing damage to the solar cell 10.
However, with corresponding tear off forces, the series connector 24, which is usually capable of withstanding only tear off forces of up to 60 N, would tear.
The thickness of the Sn lump is designed to be homogeneous, where, in the area in which the series connector 24 is connected to the Sn lump or extends in the latter, the separation a between the backside contact and the series connector should be at least 10 μm, preferably 20 μm to 500 μm, particularly 100 μm to 200 μm. If, in the embodiment example of
The minimum separation a to be maintained is important, so that the tear off forces are not transferred to the place 1, that is to the peripheral boundary line of the support location with respect to the outer surface 23, that is in the contact area between the Sn lump 26 and the Ni:V layer 20. Otherwise, a peeling off would occur immediately along the outer surface 23, resulting successively in the transfer of the tear off forces over an increasingly smaller contact surface.
By means of the separation a, the tear off or pull off force is distributed over a larger material area, and thus the contact surface is ostensibly increased, so that, even in the case of high tear off or pull off forces, the layer structure of the solar cell is not damaged.
As is apparent from the schematic diagram of
The term “entry area” mentioned above basically refers to an entry place.
To be able to introduce high tear off forces, it is also provided advantageously that the connector 24 is introduced into the Sn lump 26 in such a way that, above the connector 24, solder material extends at a thickness D1 between 200 μm and 500 μm. The thickness D1 is the separation between the upper side of the connector 24 and the cone 27 of the support location 26.
The embodiment example of
Independently thereof, the separation between the peripheral boundary line of the Sn lump 26 on the outer surface 23, marked I in the figures, and the entry point or the outer contact point of the connector 24 with the support location 26, marked II in the figures, should be at least 50 μm, preferably at least 100 μm, particularly at least 300 μm, preferably between 300 μm and 3 mm, particularly between 300 μm and 1 mm, although, in principle, there is no upper limit. This separation is marked b in
The separation b can be different in different radial directions; however, it should be at least 50 μm, particularly at least 100 μm.
The contact area 32 of the series connector 24 on the support location 28 can be referred to as an area II that is at risk for tearing off, and the contact area between the support location 28 and the Ni:V layer 20, as an area I that is at risk for tearing off, analogously to
In the embodiment example of
By choosing the thickness of the solder material which extends above the series connector 24, as is shown purely diagrammatically in
Independently thereof, the separation a ensures that no peeling off or tearing off occurs in the contact area with the Ni:V layer 20 (area I), so that the pull off forces transferred to the layer system do not lead to the detachment of the Si layer 14 from the TCO layer 12.
Regarding the tear off mechanism, it should be noted that tearing off occurs in successive, very small steps, and that the effective adhesive force is reduced to a minimum. In the process, infinitesimal tearing off of microscopically small partial surfaces occurs successively. The tearing off forces here are distributed over lines measuring a few mm, which results in a critical adhesive tension.
The embodiment example of
Based on
Thus,
From
With the aid of
If, on the other hand, the connector 24 is introduced at the separation a into the support location and if it keeps this separation in the area of the entire support location, where the areas I and II are mutually separated, then, as a function of the occurring pull off forces F, either a peeling off of the support location (
Independently thereof, however, the secondary condition is satisfied, namely that the connector 24 maintains a separation a in each partial support location 126, 226 with respect to the top side 23 of the solar cell 10, that is the bottom side of the conducting path 326. Furthermore, the separation between the outer margin of the conducting path 326, viewed in the longitudinal direction of the connector 24, that is the area I, and the entry place of the connector 24 into the respective outermost partial support location 126, that is the area II, should be the separation b. The separation a should be at least 10 μm; in particular, it should be between 20 μm and 500 μm, preferably between 100 μm and 200 μm. The separation b is preferably b≧50 μm, and in particular it should be between 300 μm and 3 mm, preferably between 300 μm and 1 mm.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 002 954.8 | Jul 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/059192 | 7/16/2009 | WO | 00 | 2/15/2011 |