62 research outputs found
Development of a high efficiency thin silicon solar cell
Preparation for full scale operation of the pilot line included reduction of the back metallization coverage to reduce the differential thermal expansion of very thin cells, mapping excess injection current at low dark forward voltage, determining the radius of curvature for fracture as a function of silicon thickness, and determining absorptance/emittance ratios for thin silicon solar cells
Development of a high efficiency thin silicon solar cell
Variations in temperatures used in experimental processing and their effect on the resulting solar cell performance parameters were investigated. Diffusion temperature variation results in a fairly distinct optimum cell performance for diffusion temperatures in the immediate vicinity of 850 C. An additional effort was also devoted to redesign of the matallization gridline pattern for both minimum light blockage and minimum fill factor alteration due to series resistance. Efforts on improvement of tantalum oxide antireflection coatings were undertaken. Fifty 2 cm x 2 cm cells having a range of thicknesses have been submitted as the first sample group. These cells were processed under conditions tentatively identified during this first contractual quarter's experiments as being optimal for resulting cell performance
Development of a high efficiency thin silicon solar cell
Specific power output and radiation resistance characteristics developed for thin film silicon solar cells are reported. The technological base for fabricating these high efficiency cells and limitations of cell photovoltage are included. In addition, optical and electronic measurement instrumentation and mathematical analyses aids are included. Antireflection coatings for these cells are discussed
Development of a high efficiency thin silicon solar cell
A key to the success of this program was the breakthrough development of a technology for producing ultra-thin silicon slices which are very flexible, resilient, and tolerant of moderate handling abuse. Experimental topics investigated were thinning technology, gaseous junction diffusion, aluminum back alloying, internal reflectance, tantalum oxide anti-reflective coating optimization, slice flexibility, handling techniques, production rate limiting steps, low temperature behavior, and radiation tolerance
Development of an economical silicon solar cell
The growth of electronically viable silicon films on inexpensive foreign substrates is studied, with the objective of creating a technology to radically reduce the overall cost of the silicon employed in photovoltaic solar energy conversion. The approach employed is to enhance crystalline ordering during film nucleation by confining arriving silicon atoms to a narrow band traveling across a substrate, i.e., the Lateral Growth Technique (LGT). The efforts have employed physical vapor deposition of silicon in a vacuum evaporator on glass and metal substrates with both slit masks and single defining edges, and subsequent chemical vapor deposition (CVD) of thicker films on these thin film structures by pyrolysis of silane at higher temperatures
Development of an improved high efficiency thin silicon solar cell
Efforts were concerned with optimizing techniques for thinning silicon slices in NaOH etches, initial investigations of surface texturing, variation of furnace treatments to improve cell efficiency, initial efforts on optimization of gridline and cell sizes and Pilot Line fabrication of quantities of 2 cm x 2 cm 50 micron thick cells
Energy requirement for the production of silicon solar arrays
An assessment of potential changes and alternative technologies which could impact the photovoltaic manufacturing process is presented. Topics discussed include: a multiple wire saw, ribbon growth techniques, silicon casting, and a computer model for a large-scale solar power plant. Emphasis is placed on reducing the energy demands of the manufacturing process
Energy requirement for the production of silicon solar arrays
Photovoltaics is subject of an extensive technology assessment in terms of its net energy potential as an alternate energy source. Reduction of quartzite pebbles, refinement, crystal growth, cell processing and panel building are evaluated for energy expenditure compared to direct, indirect, and overhead energies
Development of an Improved High Efficiency Thin Solar Cell
High efficiency cells (up to 14 AMO at 25 C)were fabricated from 10 - 15 ohm-cm silicon by using screen printed aluminum paste as the alloy source for the production of back surface fields. Thick consistency pastes that have been cured prior to a short heat treatment at 850 C were most effective in achieving these efficiency levels
Low cost silicon solar arrays
The economic production of silicon solar cell arrays circumvents p-n junction degradation by nuclear doping, in which the Si-30 transmutes to P-31 after thermal neutron capture. Also considered are chemical purity specifications for improved silicon bulk states, surface induced states, and surface states
- …