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Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University San Jose, California 95192-0082 (408) 924-3927, [email protected]
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Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

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Page 1: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Solar Cell Technology

Engineering 10

October 11, 2007

Professor Richard ChungDepartment of Chemical and Materials Engineering

San Jose State University

San Jose, California 95192-0082

(408) 924-3927, [email protected]

Page 2: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

What is a Solar Cell? It is also known as Photovoltaic cell (PV cell) A device that converts light energy (solar energy) directly to

electricity. The term solar cell is designated to capture energy from

sunlight, whereas PV cell is referred to an unspecified light source.

It is like a battery because it supplies DC power. It is not like a battery because the voltage supplied by the cell

changes with changes in the resistance of the load.

Made from a single crystalline silicon wafer

Page 3: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

History The photovoltaic effect was first recognized

in 1839 by French physicist Alexandre-Edmond Becquerel. However, it was not until 1883 that the first solar cell was built, by Charles Fritts, who coated the semiconductor selenium with an extremely thin layer of gold to form the junctions. The device was only around 1% efficient.

Russell Ohl patented the modern solar cell in 1946 (U.S. Patent 2,402,662)

Page 4: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Applications of Solar Cells Renewable energy Can be powered for remote locations It’s free, limitless, and

environmentally friendly…

Page 5: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Physics of Solar Cells Semiconductor material can be p-type (hole

carriers) or n-type (electron carriers)

N-type has impurities with an extra electron (phosphorus) P-type has impurities with one fewer electron (boron) Put them together: p-n junction A solar cell is a very large p-n junction (or diode)

n-type p-type

P+ B-

Page 6: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Basic Physics of Solar Cells

The holes from the p-type side diffuse to the n-type side.

The electrons diffuse to the p-type side. This leaves behind charged ions (missing electrons

or holes).

n-type p-type

e

hP+ B-

Page 7: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Built-In Electric Field

The charged atoms (ions) create an electric field.

This electric field makes it easy for current to flow in one direction, but hard to flow in the opposite direction.

n-type p-type

P+B-

P+ B-

P+ B-

E-field

Page 8: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

n-type p-type

P+B-

P+ B-

P+ B-

E-field

Generating Charges From The Sun Light breaks silicon bonds and creates “free” electrons and holes

“missing electrons” Holes are positive charges Built-in field separates electrons and holes

e h

Page 9: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Generating Charges From The Sun Connect diode to a circuit Photocurrent goes through resistor Causes a voltage drop

n-type p-type

P+B-

P+ B-

P+ B-

E-field

e h

V=IR IPC

Page 10: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Generating Charges From The Sun Forward biases the diode Causes a current in opposite direction

n-type p-type

P+B-

P+ B-

P+ B-e

h

IPCV=IR

-V +V

IFB

Page 11: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Generating Charges From The Sun If R is very large, V is very large If V is very large, IFB = IPC

I=0 Open Circuit condition

n-type p-type

P+B-

P+ B-

P+ B-e

h

IPCV=IR

-V +V

IFB=IPC

Page 12: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Generating Charges From The Sun If R is very small, V is very small If V = 0, IFB = 0 I= IPC

Short Circuit condition

n-type p-type

P+B-

P+ B-

P+ B-e

h

IPCV=IR=0

-V +V

IFB=0

Page 13: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Construction of Solar cells

They are constructed by layering special materials called semiconductors into thin, flat sandwiches.

These are linked by electrical wires and arranged on a panel of a stiff, non-conducting material such as glass. The panel itself is called a module.

Modules are then interconnected, in series or parallel, or both, to create an array with the desired peak DC voltage and current.

http://www.specmat.com/Overview%20of%20Solar%20Cells.htm

Page 14: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

a. Encapsulate

b. Contact Grid

c. Antireflective Coating

d. N-type Silicon

e. P-type Silicon

f. Back Contact

Page 15: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

How Solar cells work Function 1: Photogeneration of charge

carriers (electrons and holes) in a light-absorbing material

Function 2: Separation of the charge carriers to a conductive medium such as a metal contact or a wire in order to transmit the electricityIt supplies a voltage and a current to a resistive load

(light, battery, motor).Power = Current x Voltage

Page 16: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

1. A solar cell is a sandwich of n-type silicon (blue) and p-type silicon (red).

2. When sunlight shines on the cell, photons (light particles) bombard the upper surface.

3. The photons (yellow dot) carry their energy down through the cell.

4. The photons give up their energy to electrons (green dot) in the lower, p-type layer.

5. The electrons use this energy to jump across the barrier into the upper, n-type layer and escape out into the circuit.

6. Flowing around the circuit, the electrons make the lamp light up.

http://www.explainthatstuff.com/solarcells.html

Page 17: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Open circuit voltage (VOC) Short circuit current (ISC) Maximum power Efficiency

Solar Cell Properties

Factors affecting Solar Cell PerformanceLight intensity (type of light)Light wavelength (color of light)Angle of incident lightSurface condition of solar cells (cleanness)Temperature on solar cells

Page 18: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Peak Power Point (Maximum Power) A solar cell may operate over a wide range of

voltages (V) and currents (I). By increasing the resistive load on an irradiated cell continuously from zero (a short circuit) to a very high value (an open circuit) one can determine the maximum-power point, the point that maximizes V×I, that is, the load for which the cell can deliver maximum electrical power at that level of irradiation.

Dynamically adjust the load so the maximum power is always transferred, regardless of the variation in lighting.

Page 19: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Efficiency A solar cell's energy conversion efficiency (η,

"eta"), is the percentage of power converted (from absorbed light to electrical energy) and collected, when a solar cell is connected to an electrical circuit. This term is calculated using the ratio of Pm, divided by the input light irradiance under "standard" test conditions (E, in W/m²) and the surface area of the solar cell (Ac in m²).

c

m

AE

P

x

Page 20: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

I-V Curve "science shop" single cell, A= 10cm^2, V =0.5 Voltage at level 10.5 of Halogen light source

-1.80

-1.60

-1.40

-1.20

-1.00

-0.80

-0.60

-0.40

-0.20

0.00

0 100 200 300 400 500 600V (m Volt)

J (

mA

/cm

2)

Pmax = 471.2 W/cm^2

Jmax = 1.366 mA per cm^2

I max = 16.27 mA

Page 21: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Solar Cell Process Flow Start with n-type silicon wafers Cleaning the wafers

Sulfuric: peroxide - removes organics

Buffered Hydrofluoric acid - removes residual oxide

HCl: peroxide - removes heavy metals

Spin on dopant: a liquid source of boron (p-type impurity)

Anneal: 1000oC furnace step drives B into wafer (forming diode).

Page 22: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Solar Cell Process Flow Metallization: Aluminum deposited on the front and

backside of the wafer. Patterning: Resist is spun on the front and back sides of

the wafer and exposed using a mask and UV light. The exposed resist is removed during developing.

Metal Etch: The pattern from the mask is transferred to the metal using a wet metal etch. The remaining photoresist is then removed.

Metal Anneal: The wafer is annealed at 400C to improve the conductivity of the metal.

Page 23: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Semiconductor

MASK LEVEL 1

Positive photoresist

Semiconductor

Light from aligner

Page 24: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Metallization (Al)

Metal

N- Type SiliconP-Type Silicon

BoronDiffusion(P-Type)

P-type

N-type

Page 25: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

To make your own solar cells

MatE 153 – Electronic Materials Properties MatE/EE 129 - Basic IC Processing MatE/ChE 166 - Advanced Thin Film Processes MatE/EE 167 - Microelectronics Manufacturing

Methods Major/Minor in Materials Engineering Dr. Emily Allen of Chemical and Materials

Engineering and Dr. David Parent of Electrical Engineering

Page 26: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Current ObstaclesEfficiency vs. costSolar cell efficiencies vary from 6% for amorphous silicon-based solar cells to 42.8% with multiple-junction research lab cells. Solar cell energy conversion efficiencies for commercially available multicrystalline Si solar cells are around 14-16%. The highest efficiency cells have not always been the most economical — for example a 30% efficient multijunction cell based on exotic materials such as gallium arsenide or indium selenide and produced in low volume might well cost one hundred times as much as an 8% efficient amorphous silicon cell in mass production, while only delivering about four times the electrical power.

Page 27: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.
Page 28: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Future Developments The first generation photovoltaic, consists of

a large-area, single layer p-n junction diode, which is capable of generating usable electrical energy from light sources with the wavelengths of sunlight. These cells are typically made using a silicon wafer.

The second generation of photovoltaic materials is based on the use of thin-film deposits of semiconductors. These devices were initially designed to be high-efficiency, multiple junction photovoltaic cells.

Page 29: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Third generation photovoltaics are very different from the previous semiconductor devices as they do not rely on a traditional p-n junction to separate photogenerated charge carriers. These new devices include photoelectrochemical cells, polymer solar cells, and nanocrystal solar cells. Dye-sensitized solar cells are now in production. Examples include Amorphous silicon, Polycrystalline silicon, micro-crystalline silicon, Cadmium telluride, copper indium selenide/sulfide.

Fourth generation Composite photovoltaic technology with the use of polymers with nano particles can be mixed together to make a single multispectrum layer. Then the thin multi spectrum layers can be stacked to make multispectrum solar cells more efficient and cheaper based on polymer solar cell and multi junction technology used by NASA on Mars missions.

Page 30: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Review Question 1

A solar cell is designated to capture energy from:

A.Sunlight

B.White light

C.Incandescent light

D.Halogen light

E.All of the above

Page 31: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Review Question 2 A P-type semiconductor is a

________ carrier?

A.Photon

B.Electron

C.Hole

D.Ion

E.None of the above

Page 32: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Review Question 3

Which of the following is NOT a property of a solar cell?

A. Open circuit voltage (VOC)

B. Short circuit current (ISC) C. Resistor in the circuitD. Maximum powerE. Efficiency

Page 33: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Review Question 4Which of the following will impair a solar cell’s performance?

A. Size of the cellB. A water stainC. Shape of the cellD. All of the aboveE. None of the above

Page 34: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Review Question 5

What is the challenge in solar cell development?A. CostB. Maximum powerC. EfficiencyD. New thin film materialE. All of the above

Page 35: Solar Cell Technology Engineering 10 October 11, 2007 Professor Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.

Thank you!Thank you!