The invention relates to a method for producing a thin-film solar cell as well as a thin-film solar cell.
Solar cells are devices that convert light energy into electrical energy using the photovoltaic effect. Solar cells contain a semiconductor material that is used to absorb photons and to generate electrons using the photovoltaic effect.
Nowadays, there is a great demand for solar cells since solar cells are used in many technical areas. For example, solar cells are used to operate stationary systems, as they are used, for example, in traffic monitoring and traffic flow regulation on freeways. A further example is automatic devices set up outdoors that are operated at least partially with solar energy.
Solar cells customary in the trade collect light from the front side and are opaque from the rear side since they are either applied to a nontransparent substrate or the rear electrode is not transparent. However, even with a solar cell oriented toward the sun, a non-negligible light output in the form of scattered light impinges on the rear side of the solar cell module with this scattering being caused both in the atmosphere and in the direct surroundings, such as by the subsoil, adjacent walls, etc. This light output in the form of scattered light assumes all the more significance if, instead of solar cells exactly oriented toward the sun, statically rigidly mounted solar cell modules are used, such as is frequently the case in the above-mentioned stationary systems. In this case, it will commonly occur that during most of most the period of insolation, the insolation does not optimally fall on the front side of the solar cells, as a result of which a valuable part of light output is not convertible into electric current. Similar problems occur when, for architectonic or structural reasons, optimum orientation toward the sun is not possible.
Solar cell modules functioning on both sides that can collect light from both the front side and from the rear side of the solar cells used offer one remedy for this.
For example, the patent U.S. 2007/0251570 discloses a thin-film solar cell that is transparent on both sides.
In contrast, the object of the invention is to create an improved method for producing a thin-film solar cell as well as an improved thin-film solar cell that is capable of collecting light both from the front side and the rear side and converting it into electrical energy.
The objects of the invention are in each case accomplished through the characteristics of the independent claims. Preferred embodiments of the invention are specified in the dependent claims.
The invention discloses a method for producing a thin-film solar cell with a photoactive layer that has, on the front side, an electrode optically transparent in the range of visible light, wherein an electrically conductive network of conductor tracks is applied on the rear side and/or the front side of the photoactive layer that, seen macroscopically, is optically transparent in the range of visible light. In the context of the invention, the range of visible light includes the wavelength range from 300 nm through 1300 nm. These limits result from the band gaps of the absorber material, such as silicon, and the inherent absorption of the glass material.
The network of conductor tracks (110) is preferably applied on the rear side of the photoactive layer (100). The conductor tracks of the network preferably contain particles of different sizes and geometries. Here, the term “particle” also includes aggregates, in particular, colloidal aggregates. Examples of aggregates are micelles and liquid crystalline structures.
According to another embodiment of the invention, in the method, an optically transparent plastic protective layer is applied on the network of conductor tracks. The material used for the plastic protective layer can comprise, for example, polyurethane (PU), ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA), or polyvinyl butyral (PVB). The additional application of the plastic protective layer has the advantage here that the network of conductor tracks is protected from external environmental influences or that the photoactive layer is encapsulated. Moreover, the use of such a plastic protective layer, for example, in the form of an EVA or PVB film, offers the capability of applying a glass surface on the rear side of the photoactive layer. The EVA or PVB film acquires an adhesion promoting effect and thus bonds the glass layer to the photoactive layer.
The method according to the invention has the advantage that, therewith, networks of conductor tracks can be produced simply and flexibly on the rear side of the photoactive layer. Thus, it is, for example, possible to apply the network directly on the rear side of the photoactive layer by a printing method, such as silk-screening, ink jet printing, aerosol jet printing, pulse jet printing, and offset printing, and/or flexography.
According to one embodiment of the invention, the method comprises the application of the electrically conductive network of conductor tracks on the rear side the photoactive layer. This includes the steps for application of a network of particles on the rear side and heating the network of particles to form the corresponding electrically conductive network of conductor tracks. The use of particles to form the conductor tracks has the advantage that the sintering temperature required for printing methods is reduced. Thus, it is, for example, possible, with a diameter distribution in the range below 100 nm, to reduce the sintering temperature all the way to 70° C. In this temperature range, the photoactive layer is not temperature sensitive since this layer is designed to withstand significantly higher temperatures, for example, under direct insolation.
Instead of the direct application of the network of conductor tracks on the rear side of the photoactive layer, it is also possible according to one embodiment of the invention to apply the electrically conductive network of conductor tracks on a plastic protective layer and/or an optically transparent surface layer. The layer thus prepared is then applied on the rear side of the photoactive layer. Depending on the material used for the plastic protective layer or depending on the method used, in which the electrically conductive network of conductor tracks is applied to the plastic protective layer, this can also be accomplished by application of a network of particles on the plastic protective layer followed by heating to form the electrically conductive network of conductor tracks. However, this requires that the plastic protective layer can withstand such heating of the network of particles without structural change.
According to one embodiment of the invention, the method further comprises the step of the application of an optically transparent surface layer on the plastic protective layer, wherein the plastic protective layer comprises an adhesion-promoting material to promote adhesion between the surface layer and the plastic protective layer and between the rear side of the photoactive layer and the plastic protective layer. For example, the optically transparent surface layer can be a glass surface that is “glued onto” the photoactive layer using the plastic protective layer. However, besides glass, plastic materials, preferably polyethylene terephthalate (PET) that are optically transparent in the range of visible light and have high mechanical hardness, but without having the weight and the rigid properties of conventional glass, can also be used as the transparent surface layer. This also provides the possibility of producing highly flexible solar cells that can be used, for example, through incorporation into textiles, as transportable energy sources.
According to another embodiment of the invention, the protective layer is a flexible film, with the application of the plastic protective layer and/or the optically transparent surface layer accomplished by laying and rolling onto the rear side of the photoactive layer. The use of a flexible film onto which the network of conductor tracks is applied has the advantage that production of solar cells, even, for example, of large area “endless” solar cells, is possible in continuous production methods. The plastic protective layer contains preferably polyurethane, ethylene vinyl acetate, and/or polyvinyl butyral.
According to one embodiment of the invention, the application of the electrically conductive network of conductor tracks on the plastic protective layer is accomplished through one or a plurality of the following methods such as silk-screening, inkjet printing, aerosol jet printing, pulse jet printing, heliogravure, offset printing, and/or flexography.
According to another embodiment of the invention, the application of the network of particles is accomplished through application of a dispersion, with the dispersion comprising the particles and a liquid. The liquid can be water and/or an organic solvent and/or a liquid plastic. The selection of the suitable liquid depends on various criteria, such as sinter temperature, aggregation behavior of the particles in the liquid as well as, in particular in the selection of liquid plastics as the liquid, the subsequent use of the cured plastic as protective conductive encapsulation of the particles. Also, surface-active substances, such as surfactants or amphiphilic polymers can be included.
According to one embodiment of the invention, the conductor tracks have a width between 1 μm and 1 mm, with the conductor tracks mutually separated by a distance of between 2 μm and 20 mm, preferably between 5 μm and 1 mm. However, in particular, the conductor tracks are dimensioned relative to their width and separation distance such that, with the least possible material outlay, an adequately high electrical conductivity for charge carrier transport can be ensured.
Another criterion for the arrangement of the conductor tracks is that the mutual separation distance of the conductor tracks be less than or equal to the migration length of the charge carrier in the photoactive layer. The advantageous width of the conductor tracks then results from this distance and the degree of coverage, which, for its part, determines the electrical resistance of the network. Thus, it is possible, for example, with a degree of coverage of 10%, to obtain a layer resistance of ca. 1 ohm per square when pastes containing silver particles are used as conductor track material. Here again, it is crucial that the size of the silver particles must be very small, e.g., clearly less than 1 μm, such that already with temperature treatments below 150° C., the desired conductivity is obtained. The particles are, preferably, metal particles, particularly preferably silver particles. Other possible metals are, for example, copper or aluminum.
Alternatively, the particles can also contain carbon particles. For example, the carbon particles can be carbon nanotubes and/or carbon black. The use of carbon nanotubes has the advantage that these have, because of their high aspect ratio of diameter and length, a low percolation limit relative to electrical conductivity. Thus, an extremely small quantity of carbon nanotubes suffices to nevertheless ensure high electrical conductivity of the conductor tracks formed therefrom.
“Carbon black” consists of small particles with a typical size range between 10 nm and 100 nm. In particular, with the use of carbon black, so-called “conductive carbon black”, which has particularly good electrical conductivity, can be used.
The particles form the conductor tracks preferably in the form of a composite material with a plastic. Such a plastic can be, for example, polyethylene (PE), or polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), or polyaniline (PANI), or a combination thereof. Through the additional use of plastics in the conductor tracks, their mechanical stability is increased, for one thing. For another, through the use of conductive plastics such as polyaniline, for example, the electrical conductivity of the conductor tracks formed by particles is further increased. And third, the use of plastic in the conductor tracks serves to prevent a direct spatial contact between a photoactive layer and particles. Thus, even materials that, without encapsulation, would react chemically or electrochemically with the particles can be used as a photoactive layer. This increases the flexibility in the selection of materials that can be used in the photoactive layer.
According to another embodiment of the invention, the particles can, for example, have a diameter between 10 nm and 10 μm. However, preferably, the particles have a diameter between 100 nm and 1.50 μm, and particularly preferably, they have a diameter between 250 nm and 1 μm.
In a further aspect, the invention relates to a thin-film solar cell with a photoactive layer, wherein the front side has an electrode optically transparent in the range of visible light and the rear side has an electrically conductive network of conductor tracks that, seen macroscopically, is optically transparent in the range of visible light (300 nm to 1300 nm).
The conductor tracks preferably contain particles, particularly preferably with a diameter between 10 nm and 10 μm.
According to another embodiment of the invention, the rear side has, in addition to the conductor tracks, transparent conductive oxides. For example, these oxides can be indium tin oxide (ITO), aluminum tin oxide, antimony tin oxide, or fluorine tin oxide. These oxide layers can extensively cover the rear side of the photoactive layer, with the network of conductor tracks located either between the rear side of the photoactive layer and the oxide layer or between the oxide layer and a protective layer covering the oxide layer, for example, in the form of a plastic protective layer such as EVA. The use of an additional optically transparent conductive oxide layer has the advantage that a sheet electrode can be provided that has high electrical conductivity because of the additional network of conductor tracks. Because of the planar shape, the solar cell thus obtains high efficiency since charge carriers can be injected or skimmed off not only at the spatial positions of the conductor tracks but extensively over the entire rear side of the photoactive layer. The absorption of such a rear electrode of the photoactive material is, with a sheet resistance between 1 and 4 ohm per square, preferably between 5% and 20%.
In the following, embodiments of the invention are explained in greater detail with reference to the drawings. They depict:
In the following, elements similar to each other are labeled with the same reference characters.
The solar cell of
For operation of the solar cell, the electrodes 104 and the network of conductor tracks 110 are coupled with an electrical load 112. Through incidence of light either through the electrode 104 onto the active layer 100 and/or through the network 110 onto the active layer 100, light energy is converted into electrical energy by charge carrier separation in the photoactive layer 100.
Another purpose of the protective layer 200 can further consist in the sealing of the layer structure of the photoactive layer 100.
When the electrically conductive network of conductor tracks 110 is viewed enlarged, the particles 300 depicted in the enlarged representation in
The optional Step E in the form of thermal treatment of the network of particles serves to form the electrically conductive network of conductor tracks. This is required in particular if they do not already have the required properties due to a simple, preferably fast, drying procedure. The heating can also serve as a curing process for a plastic used in forming the conductor tracks. Then, in Step F, a plastic protective layer, for example, an EVA film, is applied to the network of conductor tracks.
The printing paste should be designed for application of the particles on the rear side such that it preferably achieves the desired conductivity without heating above 150°. This is true in particular for printing techniques such as silk-screening, for example. Thus, temperature stability is ensured particularly with the use of a CdTe-layer structure of the photoactive layer.
The method is concluded in Step G with the application of a surface layer on the electrode of the front side or the EVA film on the rear side of the photoactive layer. These surface layers can, for example, be plastic protective layers or glass layers between which the solar cell module created is packed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102008064355.6 | Dec 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP09/65829 | 11/25/2009 | WO | 00 | 8/17/2011 |