1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the general field of optical design for light collection in solar devices. In particular, it relates to surface coatings for use on solar device surfaces.
2. Discussion of the Background
Photovoltaic (PV) solar cells convert solar energy into electricity. One of the main focuses in solar cell research is the improvement of energy conversion efficiency (from incident solar power to electric power output). As a combination of an electronic device and an optical device, the operation of a solar cell involves both electronic and optical processes. The research in optical design of solar cells includes light collection and trapping, spectrally-matched absorption, and up/down wavelength conversion.
A good optical design for light collection is vital in achieving high-performance solar cells. One of the popular optical designs for today's commercial silicon solar cells involves anisotropically-etched micrometer-scale surface textures covered with a layer of hydrogenated silicon nitride for anti-reflection. This optical design works best on single-crystalline silicon solar cells. Since the incident angle of sunlight varies during the day, a mechanical tracking device is often required to maintain surface normal incident conditions throughout the day for improved light collection and reduced fluctuations in solar electricity generation. Additionally, as the thickness of solar cells decreases drastically in next-generation solar cells, the maximum attainable short-circuit current drops sharply due to the limited absorption length and the relatively low absorption coefficient of the solar cell. A good optical design can improve cell efficiency by increased light collection and trapping.
Various optical designs have been proposed for solar cells, including bulk-optics-based light concentrators, silicon nitride and silicon dioxide surface coatings, micrometer-scale textured surfaces, nanometer-scale moth's eyes, and refractive-index-gradient surfaces, to improve cell efficiency by increased light collection and trapping. However, these designs have had less than satisfactory performance or face difficulties in manufacturing that increase production expenses. For example, the bulk optics light concentrators often involve precision machining of optical mirrors or lenses. The silicon nitride and silicon dioxide thin-film coatings only work in a limited spectral range at near-normal incident angles. The micrometer-scale surface textures involve anisotropic etching of single-crystalline silicon substrates. Anisotropic etching does not apply to thin-film silicon and non-silicon based solar cells. Moth's eye and refractive-index-gradient surfaces have been difficult to implement in current commercial solar cells.
One approach to improve performance while reducing costs and circumventing some of the manufacturing difficulties described above involves solution-based fabrication processes. Solution-based fabrication processes involve applying a liquid solution to a substrate surface followed by thermal treatment to provide a deposited material layer having desired optical properties. Solution-based fabrication processes provide an attractive approach for multiple-scale (nano to micro and macro scale) hierarchical manufacturing since the processes can be readily scaled up for large-area fabrication with inexpensive material and fabrication costs, and do not require complicated large vacuum systems as with most current fabrication processes.
Additionally, another challenge in achieving high-efficiency thin-film solar cells is the insufficient absorption of sunlight because of short optical paths imposed by the small layer thickness (around a few micrometers). This problem is especially severe in thin-film silicon solar cells due to the relatively low absorption coefficient of the indirect band gap.
Therefore, there remains a need for a structure and a process for its proper fabrication that has improved light collection and reduced costs over existing structures and processes.
Aspects of the invention generally provide structures and methods for forming structures on substrates, for example, solar cells, having desired optical properties. In one aspect, a structure is provided including a substrate and a surface coating formed on the surface of the substrate, wherein the surface coating includes a monolayer of dielectric particles and a dielectric layer having a thickness of less than a height of the dielectric particles.
In another aspect of the invention, a method is provided for processing a substrate including providing a substrate having a surface, exposing a solution comprising dielectric particles, forming a monolayer of dielectric particles from the solution on the substrate surface, depositing a dielectric layer on the substrate surface at a thickness of less than a height of the dielectric particles, and exposing the substrate to a thermal process.
Those skilled in the art will further appreciate the above-noted features and advantages of the invention together with other important aspects thereof upon reading the detailed description that follows in conjunction with the drawings.
For more complete understanding of the features and advantages of the present invention, reference is now made to the detailed description of the invention along with the accompanying figures, wherein:
Although making and using various embodiments of the present invention are discussed in detail below, it should be appreciated that the present invention provides many inventive concepts that may be embodied in a wide variety of contexts. The specific aspects and embodiments discussed herein are merely illustrative of ways to make and use the invention, and do not limit the scope of the invention.
In the description which follows like parts may be marked throughout the specification and drawing with the same reference numerals, respectively. The drawing figures are not necessarily to scale and certain features may be shown exaggerated in scale or in somewhat generalized or schematic form in the interest of clarity and conciseness.
The present invention provides for a structure and process for forming the structure for use on a substrate, which substrate can be a partially or fully formed solar cell. In one embodiment of the invention a structure includes a surface coating formed from a monolayer of dielectric particles and a dielectric layer. The surface coating may be an omni-directional anti-reflective coating (Omni-AR). The surface coating is prepared by a solution-based method.
In one embodiment of the surface coating, the surface coating comprises an array of partially exposed particles of a dielectric material formed above the surface of a dielectric layer having the same or similar refractive index as the dielectric particles. This surface coating structure is fabricated from one or more solutions containing dielectric particles and/or precursors for the dielectric layer. A refractive-index-gradient dielectric layer may be disposed between the surface coating and the substrate to provide a refractive index transition between the respective refractive indices of the surface coating and the substrate. The surface coating can be directly applied to different types of solar cells made of different materials. The surface coating is described further in reference to
A layer of dielectric particles 110 is formed on a substrate surface 105 as shown in
Suitable dielectric particles have an average diameter of between about 0.1 micrometers (μm) and about 200 μm, such as between about 1 μm and about 20 μm, for example, about 2 μm. The monolayer of dielectric particles may include dielectric particles having two or more average diameters. For example, a monolayer of dielectric particles may include intermixed sets of particles with a first set of dielectric particles having an average diameter of about 1 μm and a second set of dielectric particles having an average diameter of about 2 μm. In another example, the monoloayer of dielectric particles may include a layer of particles in the nanometer range, less than about 1 μm, and a layer of micrometer-sized particles. The dielectric particles 110 may be in the shape of a sphere, a cone, a pyramid, a polyhedron, a trapezoid, an ovoid, and combinations thereof.
The dielectric particles are preferably provided in an sufficient amount to result in contact or near contact of the dielectric particles 100 to each other throughout the monolayer. The invention contemplates that the dielectric particles 110 may have a packing density between about 3×105 particles/cm2 and about of about 3×107 particles/cm2 on the substrate surface for about 2 μm sized particles. The packing density will vary according to the particle size for the one or more particle sizes used to form the monolayer of dielectric particles. One example of a monolayer of dielectric particles 110 are silicon dioxide spherical particles having an average diameter of about 2 μm, a refractive index of about 1.5, and with a packing density of about 2.5×107 particles/cm2.
The dielectric particles 110 may be formed from a solution including between about 0.001 weight % and about 10 weight % of dielectric particles, for example, about 0.1 weight %, i.e., 0.1 grams of particles in 100 milliliters of solution. The solution used to deposit the particles may be a solution-based process selected from the group of spin-coating, dip-coating, spray deposition, ionic layer-by-layer assembly, and combinations thereof.
An example of a monolayer dielectric particle formation process from a solution based deposition process includes an aqueous solution containing 2.03-micrometer mono-dispersed spherical silicon dioxide particles, for example, particles identified at www.microspheres-nanospheres.com [Catalog #: 140214]. The aqueous solution was diluted with de-ionized water to a desired particle concentration of 0.1 weight % or 0.1 grams of SiO2 particles in 100 milliliters of solution. The solution was spin coated on the surface of a silicon substrate at 250 rotations/minute for 30 seconds to form a monolayer of silicon dioxide particles on the surface. The substrate coated with particle-containing solution was exposed to a thermal process at 95° C. and 1 atmosphere for 2 minutes to remove any liquid solution.
A dielectric layer 120 is then deposited on the substrate surface 105 as shown in
The dielectric layer 120 is deposited at a thickness of less than the height of the dielectric particles, such as between about 10% and about 90% of the height of the particles. Suitable dielectric layer thickness include between about 10% and about 75% of the height of the particles, for example, about 15% of the height of the particles. In another embodiment of the deposited dielectric layer, the dielectric layer 120 comprises silicon dioxide having a refractive index of about 1.5 deposited at a thickness of about 15% of the diameter of spherical dielectric particles. The dielectric layer 120 may be deposited in two or more layers to provide the desired thickness. The two or more dielectric layers of the dielectric layer 120 may have different refractive indices within the refractive index range described herein for the dielectric layer 120. The dielectric layer 120 may be deposited by spin-on glass, spray deposition, or sol-gel deposition processes, among others, of which spin-on glass and sol-gel are preferred.
In one embodiment of the deposited layer, the thickness of the dielectric layer is about 50% of the diameter of spherical particles, so the coated surface forms an array of partially exposed spherical particles that may form hemi-spherical structures above the dielectric layer. It is believed the presence of partially spherical (or hemi-spherical) particle structures 150 of the dielectric particles 110 above the dielectric layer 120 allows omi-directional (incident-angle independent) and broad-spectrum anti-reflection (Omni-AR).
The deposited dielectric layer 120 and the deposited particles 110 may then be exposed to a thermal treatment process to cure the deposited materials and form a surface coating 130 as shown in
One example of the dielectric layer 120 deposition process includes a spin-on glass (SOG) solution (Honeywell Catalog #: 211), which is applied by a spin-coating process to a thickness of about 0.2 μm on a substrate having a monolayer of 2.03-micrometer spherical silicon dioxide particles. The solution was added to a substrate rotating at about 1500 revolutions/minute for about 30 seconds to produce the 0.2 μm layer. The disposed layer was then exposed to a thermal treatment in air with a first process at about 80° C. for about 60 seconds for solvent removal and then a second process at 130° C. for 60 seconds for cross-linking in the spin-on glass material.
In an alternative embodiment of the process for forming the surface coating 130 as described herein, the dielectric layer 120 may be first deposited on the substrate surface 105 from a solution and then a monolayer of dielectric particles 110 are deposited on the dielectric layer in a liquid state to partially immerse the particles in the dielectric layer. The deposited dielectric layer 120 and dielectric particles 110 are then exposed to a thermal treatment to form the surface coating 130.
In another alternative embodiment of the process for forming the surface coating 130 as described herein, the dielectric layer 120 and the dielectric particles 110 are deposited or formed on the substrate surface 105 at the same time. The concurrent deposition process may utilize separate solutions for the dielectric layer 120 and the dielectric particles 110, or may use a single solution, such as a solution of dielectric particles 120 dispersed in a sol-gel solution or spin-on glass solution. The deposited dielectric layer 120 and dielectric particles 110 are then exposed to a thermal treatment to form the surface coating 130.
It is believed that the performance of the surface coating can be controlled by using dielectric particles of different sizes, changing the refractive index of the dielectric particles, changing the packing density of the micrometer-scale dielectric particles, varying the thickness of the dielectric layer, and changing the refractive index of the dielectric layer. For example, effective dielectric particle sizes are usually larger than the longest wavelength of the spectral range of interest as larger particle sizes can extend the spectral range for longer wavelengths. It is believed that infrared light from solar radiation can be more effectively coupled into a solar cell as dielectric particle size increases, which is typically undesirable. Additionally, it is believed that a higher packing density of particles is desirable for lower reflectivity, since the flat regions between particles do not reduce surface reflection. It is further believed that a dielectric layer thicker than the radius of the spherical particles reduces the range of incident angle in which the surface coating described herein is effective. Additionally, the optimum refractive indices of the dielectric particles and dielectric layer are determined by the refractive index of the substrate.
The refractive index of the refractive gradient layer 240 may be provided at a desired refractive index by mixing a plurality of refractive gradient layer 240 materials with different refractive indices. For example a desired refractive index may be made by mixing silicon dioxide, which has a refractive index of 1.5, and titanium dioxide, which has a refractive index of 2.9, in a desired ratio. For example, if silicon dioxide and titanium dioxide are mixed to form refractive gradient layer 240, a ratio of silicon oxide to titanium oxide of between about 100:1 and about 1:100, may be used for producing refractive indices greater than about 1.5 and less than about 2.9.
Alternatively, the refractive index gradient layer 240 may comprise two or more layers with each layer having a different refractive index. In one embodiment of the multi-layer refractive index gradient layer, an initial layer is deposited on the substrate surface having a refractive index between about 1.5 and about 5.0, for example, between about 2.0 and about 4.0 and a second layer disposed adjacent to the surface coating having a refractive index between about 1.0 and about 4.0, for example, between about 1.5 and about 2.5. This embodiment of the refractive-index-graded layer 240 can be made from a multiple-layer structure composed of materials with different refractive indices, or from a mixture of, for example, titanium dioxide and silicon dioxide. Silicon dioxide has a refractive index of 1.5 and titanium dioxide has a refractive index of 2.9. Mixing titanium dioxide and silicon dioxide in different ratios will allow the formation of layers with different refractive indices.
It is believed that the index gradient layer in conjunction with the surface coating can minimize surface reflectivity in wide ranges of incident angle and wavelength by providing a transition material having a refractive index between that of the surface coating and the substrate.
In contrast,
In
It is believed that the ability to collect direct incident sunlight as well as diffusive sunlight with minimal reflection for a wide range of incident angle from surface normal to 60°-plus allows for a more efficient solar cell as such an ability to effectively collect sunlight in a wide range of incident angle allows efficient collection of sunlight all day long and under all weather conditions without the need for an optical tracking device for proper alignment of the solar cell with incident sunlight. Since it has been estimated that the diffuse component of sunlight accounts for 10% to 20% of the total solar energy on a horizontal surface, and on a cloudy day, 100% of the sunlight is diffuse, the structures formed using the surface coating described herein are believed to be more efficient in collecting sunlight under all weather conditions.
The surface coating also increases the effective optical paths of the collected light by multiple incident paths and increased total internal reflection as shown in
In the example illustrated in
It is believed that the surface coating described herein will result in improved optical design for solar cells. The surface coating has been observed to reduce surface reflectivity over a broad spectrum, reduce surface reflectivity over a wide range of incident angle, and provide a surface coating that is not substrate specific. The processes described herein allow the surface coating to be fabricated by solution-based methods so the surface coating has an intrinsically lower cost compared to prior antireflective coatings for solar cell fabrication and the surface coating is suitable for large-area solar cell fabrication.
While specific alternatives to steps of the invention have been described herein, additional alternatives not specifically disclosed but known in the art are intended to fall within the scope of the invention. Thus, it is understood that other applications of the present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art upon reading the described embodiment and after consideration of the appended claims and drawing.