The present invention relates to a stacked-type thin film solar cell device comprising a plurality of stages of photoelectric conversion layers each for converting an incident light into electricity and transparent electrode layers each for multiply reflecting light to be sufficiently absorbed in the photoelectric conversion layers, and a method of manufacturing the same.
A photovoltaic power generation system is expected as a system for generating clean energy which serves to protect the global environment in the 21 century against an increase of CO2 gas due to the burning of fossil energy, and its production increases explosively all over the world. For this reason, there arises a situation where silicon wafers run short in the world, and in recent years, the production of thin film solar cells not depending on the supply of silicon wafers is fast increasing.
In thin film solar cells, conventionally, in order to widely and effectively use the solar spectrum, a tandem structure has been adopted in which a plurality of photoelectric conversion layers (semiconductor layers) formed of materials of different band gaps are stacked on an insulating translucent substrate. Now studies are made to increase the power generation efficiency of a solar cell by producing the “light confinement effect” in which an incident light is multiply reflected in the solar cell so that its optical path may be extended and the light may be sufficiently absorbed in the photoelectric conversion layers. For this reason, studies are proceeding on a structure of a thin film solar cell device in which a transparent electrode layer is inserted between a back surface electrode layer and a photoelectric conversion layer and between a plurality of stacked photoelectric conversion layers (see Patent Documents 1 and 2).
Patent Document 1: Japanese Patent Application Laid Open Gazette No. 2002-222972
Patent Document 2: Japanese Patent Application Laid Open Gazette No. 2002-208715
In the thin film solar cell device according to the above precedent (Patent Document 1 and 2), the transparent electrode layer which is inserted for the purpose of light confinement is formed in close contact with the photoelectric conversion layer (semiconductor layer). The material of the transparent electrode is generally an oxide-based, and when these thin films are formed directly on the semiconductor layer by the CVD method, the sputtering method, the vacuum deposition method or the like, an insulating layer (an oxide of the semiconductor layer) is formed in the portion of an interface of these films. For this reason, a contact resistance is generated due to the insulating layer, and inside the solar cell device, there arises a problem that the series resistance component thereby increases and the short circuit current density decreases, whereby the power generation efficiency decreases.
In the above precedent (Patent Document 2), in order to suppress the generation of such an insulating layer, it tries to form the transparent electrode film (ITO) may be formed by a sputtering process in which the oxygen concentration is lowered. It is difficult, however, to suppress the oxidation reaction (on a surface of the semiconductor layer) caused by the oxygen atoms contained in the sputter target (ITO), and the effect can be hardly expected.
The present invention is intended to solve the above problem, and it is a main object of the present invention to achieve a thin film solar cell device having higher power generation efficiency.
The present invention is intended for a thin film solar cell device, and according to an aspect of the present invention, a thin film solar cell device has a photoelectric conversion layer provided between a front surface transparent electrode layer and a back surface metal electrode layer, being formed of a semiconductor layer film of which the main ingredient is silicon and a transparent electrode layer provided between the photoelectric conversion layer and the back surface metal electrode layer, of which the main ingredient is an oxide, and in the thin film solar cell device, the transparent electrode layer has a through hole and a conductive member provided in the through hole, being formed of a nonoxide in contact with the photoelectric conversion layer and the back surface metal electrode layer.
By the aspect of the present invention, since the through hole filled with the conductive member is formed as an electricity conducting path in the transparent electrode layer inserted between the back surface metal electrode and the photoelectric conversion layer, it is possible to reduce the effect of the contact resistance caused by the insulating layer (the oxide of the semiconductor layer) formed in an interface between the transparent electrode layer and the photoelectric conversion layer and maximally draw out the generated current.
Further, by the aspect of the present invention, it is possible to produce the effect of forming the above-discussed through hole in the transparent electrode layer by the cheapest and easiest method.
These and other objects, features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description of the present invention when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The characteristic feature of the first preferred embodiment is to provide electricity conducting paths each formed of a conductive material different from a transparent electrode material in a back surface transparent electrode layer and an intermediate transparent electrode layer in a thin film solar cell device having a tandem structure consisting of the back surface transparent electrode layer and the intermediate transparent electrode layer for confining light in a power generation region. Hereinafter, the characteristic feature will be discussed with reference to figures.
a) is a longitudinal section showing a structure of one cell in the thin film solar cell device in accordance with the first preferred embodiment of the present invention. In
The first insulating layer 5 and the second insulating layer 10 are silicon oxide films which are unintentionally formed by oxidation of surfaces of the silicon-based semiconductor films when and after the intermediate transparent electrode layer 4 and the back surface transparent electrode layer 8 which are oxide-based transparent conductive films are formed. Though the first insulating layer 5 and the second insulating layer 10 each have a thickness in
Then, in the intermediate transparent electrode layer 4, a first electricity conducting path 6 penetrating the intermediate transparent electrode layer 4 is formed. The first electricity conducting path 6 also penetrates the first insulating layer 5 formed immediately below the intermediate transparent electrode layer 4 and is connected to an upper surface of the first photoelectric conversion layer 3. Therefore, the first electricity conducting path 6 electrically connects the first photoelectric conversion layer 3 and the second photoelectric conversion layer 7 to each other, which are opposed to each other with the intermediate transparent electrode layer 4 and the first insulating layer 5 interposed therebetween.
Similarly, in the back surface transparent electrode layer 8, a second electricity conducting path 16 penetrating the back surface transparent electrode layer 8 is formed. The second electricity conducting path 16 also penetrates the second insulating layer 10 formed immediately below the back surface transparent electrode layer 8 and is connected to an upper surface of the second photoelectric conversion layer 7. Therefore, the second electricity conducting path 16 electrically connects the second photoelectric conversion layer 7 and the back surface electrode layer 9 to each other, which are opposed to each other with the back surface transparent electrode layer 8 and the second insulating layer 10 interposed therebetween.
Due to the presence of the first electricity conducting path 6 and the second electricity conducting path 16, the current generated in the first photoelectric conversion layer 3 flows through the first electricity conducting path 6 into the second photoelectric conversion layer 7 without being affected by the first insulating layer 5. This generated current, together with the current generated in the second photoelectric conversion layer 7, flows through the second electricity conducting path 16 to the back surface electrode layer 9 without being affected by the second insulating layer 10 and is drawn out from the back surface electrode layer 9. The first electricity conducting path 6 and the second electricity conducting path 16 are formed, as discussed later in the second preferred embodiment, by a method in which micropores penetrating the intermediate transparent electrode layer 4 and the back surface transparent electrode layer 8 are formed in the intermediate transparent electrode layer 4 and the back surface transparent electrode layer 8, respectively, and then thin films each made of a conductive material are formed thereon to thereby fill the micropores with the conductive members. The micropore is, e.g., a round hole having a diameter ranging from 0.2 μm to 10 μM. The conductive members forming the both electricity conducting paths 6 and 16 each is formed of a conductive material which have a specific resistance not more than 10−4 Ωcm (since the intermediate transparent electrode layer 4 and the back surface transparent electrode layer 8 each have a specific resistance not more than 10−4 Ωcm, the specific resistance of the material for the both electricity conducting paths 6 and 16 is also set to the same value as the specific resistance of the intermediate transparent electrode layer 4 and the back surface transparent electrode layer 8), is a nonoxide-based material containing no oxygen, can be formed in an atmosphere where no oxygen exists, and is not oxidized even if it is exposed to oxygen or maintains its conductivity even if it is oxidized. Among such conductive materials are, for example, metals such as platinum, gold, chromium and ruthenium, and conductive nitride such as a titanium nitride. In a case of forming a lot of electricity conducting paths in the transparent electrode, it is preferable to make the distribution almost uniform.
b) is a perspective view showing the structure of
a) and 2(b) are graphs showing respective relations between the short circuit current density Jsc and the gross area Sd of the electricity conducting paths per one cell in the thin film solar cell device shown in
In
Thus, by forming the electricity conducting paths of which the gross area Sd is in the range of 2.5 μm2≦Sd≦100 μm2 per one cell of which the area is 25 mm2 in the transparent electrode layer of the thin film solar cell device, it is possible to achieve the maximum short circuit current density (power generation efficiency). Herein, if a plurality of electricity conducting paths [for example, nine second electricity conducting paths 16 in
The above-discussed characteristic structual feature may be applied to a case where two or more intermediate transparent electrode layers and two or more corresponding photoelectric conversion layers stacked on the intermediate transparent electrode layers, respectively, are formed in the power generation region, and this produces the same effect.
Though the solar cell has the tandem structure in which the first photoelectric conversion layer 3 and the second photoelectric conversion layer 7 are stacked in the direction of layer thickness in the first preferred embodiment, the same effect can be produced even by another structure in which only one photoelectric conversion layer is formed and the above-discussed electricity conducting paths are formed in the transparent electrode layer between the photoelectric conversion layer and the back surface metal electrode layer. Further, the same effect can be also produced by still another structure in which the above-discussed electricity conducting paths are formed only in the intermediate transparent electrode layer between the first photoelectric conversion layer 3 and the second photoelectric conversion layer 7 in the tandem type solar cell.
a) to 3(d) and 4(e) to 4(h) are process longitudinal sections showing a flow of manufacturing the thin film solar cell device having the structure discussed in the first preferred embodiment.
As shown in
Next, as shown in
Next, as shown in
Then, as shown in
Herein, the full etch-back may be performed by using, e.g., ion milling, RIE, or the like. Exposure of the transparent electrode surface can be detected by, for example, the change in the intensity of surface-reflected light obtained by emitting light to a surface of the conductive film layer 13 during the etching.
Next, as shown in
Next, as shown in
Next, as shown in
Then, as shown in
Finally, a back surface electrode layer 17 is formed on upper surfaces of the back surface transparent electrode layer 8 and the second electricity conducting paths 16. It is preferable that the back surface electrode layer 17 should be formed of silver or aluminum.
Through the above process steps, the structure of one cell of the thin film solar cell device shown in
As discussed in the first preferred embodiment, in order to achieve the maximum short circuit current density, it is necessary to form the electricity conducting paths with the ratio of the gross area of the electricity conducting paths to the area of the cell set in a range not less than 1×10−7 and not more than 4×10−6. For this, it is required that the micropores of several micron size, for example, the micropores each having a side not more than 10 μm when the cross section of each of the micropores is regarded as square or the micropores each having a diameter not more than 10 μm, should be formed in the transparent electrode layers. Even if only one electricity conducting path is provided in one cell, it is naturally necessary to form the micropores each having, for example, a diameter not more than 10 μm. It is preferable that the micropore should have a diameter almost equal to or larger than the thickness of the transparent conductive film. If the diameter of the micropore is smaller than the thickness of the transparent conductive film, it becomes difficult to fill the micropore with a film to become the conducting path. Since the thickness of the transparent conductive film is set within the range not less than 150 nm and not more than 200 nm as discussed above, the internal diameter of the micropore has only to be 0.2 μm or more.
Usually, such a micropore is formed generally by patterning using a photolithography technique. In the thin film solar cell device, however, generally, a plurality of solar battery cells are formed on a glass substrate having a large area of 1.5 m square (a surface area of 1.5 m×1.5 m) as an insulating translucent substrate. Such a glass substrate has large surface waviness (0.05 μm or more per 30 cm) and it is therefore impossible to accurately form supermicropores each having a diameter of 10 μm or less by using the photolithography technique.
Then, as shown in 5(a), first, mask fine particles 18 each having the same diameter as that of the micropore to be formed are deposited on a surface of the uppermost intermediate transparent electrode layer 4 among the front surface electrode layer 2, the first photoelectric conversion layer 3, the first insulating layer 5, and the intermediate transparent electrode layer 4 which are stacked on the insulating translucent substrate 1. Herein, if the mask fine particles 18 are deposited in a liquid, it is preferable that a material which tends to become positively charged in the liquid should be used. It may be formed of an insulator such as polystyrene or glass, or oxide ceramics such as alumina or silicon oxide if the liquid is water-based one. Since such a material as above is burned out when exposed to plasma in oxygen, the material is suitable as a mask material to be used for forming a secondary mask discussed later.
Next, as shown in
Then, as shown in
Finally, as shown in
Thus, by applying the process steps discussed in the third preferred embodiment, it is possible to most easily form the micropores each having a diameter of 10 μm or less. Further, it is possible to accurately form the supermicropores each having a diameter of 10 μm or less even on the insulating translucent substrate having large surface waviness. Moreover, it is possible to manufacture the thin film solar cell device without using the photolithography technique.
Herein, an exemplary case using the mask fine particles consisting of polystyrene and the transparent electrode consisting of ITO is shown in
As a result, it is possible to most efficiently attract the mask fine particles to the transparent electrode layer and selectively deposit the mask fine particles on the surface of the transparent electrode layer. Since the fine particles repel one another by the Coulomb repulsion, it is possible to deposit the mask fine particles 18 uniformly on the surface of the intermediate transparent electrode layer 4 with equal distance apart from one another without being flocculated in mid-course as shown in
(Notes)
While the invention has been shown and described in detail, the foregoing description is in all aspects illustrative and not restrictive. It is therefore understood that numerous modifications and variations can be devised without departing from the scope of the invention.
Though the photoelectric conversion layer has a three-layer structure of p-i-n type consisting of microcrystalline silicon-based semiconductor layer films or amorphous silicon semiconductor films in the above preferred embodiments, the same effect can be produced only if the photoelectric conversion layer has a main ingredient of silicon, and a photoelectric conversion layer formed of, e.g., silicon with germanium or other element may be used.
The present invention is favorably applied to a photovoltaic power generation system.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2007-240480 | Sep 2007 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP2008/066757 | 9/17/2008 | WO | 00 | 2/4/2010 |