Solar cell structure with back surface reflector
11139410 · 2021-10-05
Assignee
Inventors
- Xiaobo Zhang (Arcadia, CA, US)
- Kenneth M. Edmondson (Los Angeles, CA, US)
- Daniel C. Law (Arcadia, CA, US)
- Shoghig Mesropian (Tarzana, CA, US)
Cpc classification
H01L31/056
ELECTRICITY
Y02P70/50
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H01L31/06875
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/054
ELECTRICITY
Y02E10/544
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y02E10/52
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
H01L31/056
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/054
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A solar cell structure including a solar cell having a front surface and a back surface, a reflective layer disposed proximate the back surface and a flexible support layer disposed between the back surface and the reflective layer.
Claims
1. An inverted metamorphic solar cell structure comprising: a solar cell comprising a top subcell, a middle subcell, and a bottom subcell, the solar cell having a front surface, a first back surface and having a first coefficient of thermal expansion, wherein the first back surface includes spaced apart contacts thereby defining gaps allowing light to transmit between the contacts; a flexible support layer adjacent the first back surface and thereby defining a second back surface, the flexible support layer has a cross-sectional thickness ranging from about 5 μm to about 20 μm; and a reflective layer adjacent the second back surface, the reflective layer has a cross-sectional thickness of from about 0.1 μm to about 2 μm; wherein the flexible support layer has a second coefficient of thermal expansion compatible with the first coefficient of thermal expansion; wherein the reflective layer comprises gold or silver and receives incoming light passing through the solar cell and the gaps between the contacts and reflects the incoming light back to the solar cell through the gaps between the contacts; wherein a base of the lowest bandgap metamorphic cell is grown thinner than a solar cell without a reflective layer because of the presence of the reflective layer.
2. The solar cell structure of claim 1 wherein the second coefficient of thermal expansion varies from the first coefficient of thermal expansion by at most 50 percent in terms of a ppm/° C. value.
3. The solar cell structure of claim 1 wherein the first coefficient of thermal expansion is from about 5 to about 7 ppm/° C.
4. The solar cell structure of claim 3 wherein the second coefficient of thermal expansion is about 3 ppm/° C.
5. The solar cell structure of claim 1 wherein the flexible support layer has a light absorption of at most 10 percent at a wavelength at or above 900 nanometers.
6. The solar cell structure of claim 1 wherein the reflective layer has a reflectance of at least 90 percent at wavelengths at and above 750 nanometers.
7. The solar cell structure of claim 6 wherein the reflective layer has a reflectance of at least 95 percent at wavelengths at and above 750 nanometers.
8. The solar cell structure of claim 7 wherein the reflective layer has a reflectance of at least 97 percent at wavelengths at and above 750 nanometers.
9. The solar cell structure of claim 1 wherein the flexible support layer comprises a polyimide.
10. The solar cell structure of claim 1 wherein the flexible support layer includes more than one layer of support material and the support material thereof that defines the second back surface is sufficiently smooth to receive and support the reflective layer.
11. The solar cell structure of claim 1 having sufficient flexibility to be free of naked-eye-detectable damage when the structure is mounted in overlaying relationship on a cylindrical surface wherein the diameter of a cylinder defining the cylindrical surface is from 10 inches to 20 inches.
12. The solar cell structure of claim 11 wherein the diameter is 10 inches.
13. The solar cell structure of claim 11 wherein the diameter is 15 inches.
14. The solar cell structure of claim 11 wherein the diameter is 20 inches.
15. A method for manufacturing the solar cell structure according to claim 1 comprising: attaching the front surface of the solar cell to a temporary substrate; forming a flexible support layer on the back surface; forming a reflective layer on the flexible support layer; and removing the temporary substrate from the front surface.
16. A solar cell structure comprising: a high-efficiency multi junction solar cell comprising a top subcell, a middle subcell, and a bottom subcell and having a front surface and a first back surface, wherein the first back surface includes spaced apart contacts thereby defining gaps allowing light to transmit between the contacts; a flexible support layer adjacent to the first back surface and thereby defining a second back surface and wherein the flexible support layer comprises a polyimide; and a reflective layer disposed on the second back surface, the reflective layer has a cross-sectional thickness of from about 0.1 μm to about 2 μm and comprising gold or silver; wherein the reflective layer receives incoming light passing through the solar cell and the gaps between the contacts and reflects the incoming light back to the solar cell through the gaps between the contacts; wherein a base of the lowest bandgap metamorphic cell is grown thinner than a solar cell without a reflective layer because of the presence of the reflective layer.
17. The solar cell structure of claim 16 wherein the flexible support material has a light absorption of at most 10 percent at a wavelength at or above 900 nanometers.
18. The solar cell structure of claim 16 wherein the solar cell has a first coefficient of thermal expansion of about 5 to about 7 ppm/° C. and the flexible support layer has a second coefficient of thermal expansion of about 3 ppm/° C.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(10) Referring to
(11) The solar cell 12 may be any device that converts electro-magnetic radiation, whether received from the sun or otherwise, into electrical energy. The solar cell 12 may include a front (e.g., sun) surface 22 having the front contacts 14 connected thereto and a back surface 24 having the back contacts 16 connected thereto. The solar cell 12 may produce a voltage across the front surface 22 and the back surface 24 when the front surface 22 is exposed to electro-magnetic radiation, such as solar radiation.
(12) In a first implementation, the solar cell 12 may be a high efficiency multi junction solar cell, such as a gallium arsenide (“GaAs”) solar cell or an inverted metamorphic (“IMM”) solar cell. In one general expression, the solar cell 12 may include at least one or more top subcells 26, one or more middle subcells 28 and one or more bottom subcells 30. A first junction 32 may be defined by the top 26 and the middle 28 subcells and a second junction 34 may be defined by the middle 28 and the bottom 30 subcells. In one specific example, the top subcell 26 may include GaInP, the middle subcell 28 may include GaAs and the bottom subcell 30 may include InGaAs.
(13) In a second implementation, the solar cell 12 may be a traditional silicon-based solar cell.
(14) The flexible support layer 18 may include one or more layers of support material positioned proximate the back surface 24 of the solar cell 12. The flexible support layer 18 may be directly adjacent to the back surface 24 of the solar cell 12 or one or more optional intermediate layers may be disposed between the flexible support layer 18 and the back surface 24 of the solar cell 12. The flexible support layer 18 may define a second back surface 36, which may be sufficiently smooth to receive and support the reflective layer 20.
(15) The flexible support layer 18 may be formed from a support material having the required tensile strength and that may be substantially optically transparent. For example, the support material of the flexible support layer 18 may have a light absorption of at most 10 percent, such as at most 5 percent, in the relevant spectrum (e.g., wavelengths at or above 900 nanometers).
(16) Furthermore, the support material of the flexible support layer 18 may be sufficiently flexible. For example, flexibility of the flexible support layer 18 may be such that the solar cell structure 10 may be wrapped around a cylindrical drum having a diameter of 20 inches, or even 15 inches or 10 inches, without experiencing naked-eye-detectable damage (e.g., cracking) in the flexible support layer 18.
(17) Still furthermore, the support material of the flexible support layer 18 may have a coefficient of thermal expansion that closely matches the coefficient of thermal expansion of the solar cell 12. For example, the support material of the flexible support layer 18 may have a coefficient of thermal expansion that varies from the coefficient of thermal expansion of the solar cell 12 by at most 50 percent.
(18) In one particular expression, the support material of the flexible support layer 18 may be or may include polyimide. One example of a suitable polyimide useful in the flexible support layer 18 is PI-2611 polyimide available from E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company of Wilmington, Del. PI-2611 has a relatively low density, particularly compared to metallic support materials, a light absorption of about 1 to about 2 percent at wavelengths above 900 nanometers, and a coefficient of thermal expansion of about 3 ppm/° C., which is close to the typical coefficient of thermal expansion (e.g., 5-7 ppm/° C.) of IMM solar cell semiconductor materials. Other examples of suitable polyimide materials will become apparent to those skilled in the art.
(19) The flexible support layer 18 may be applied to the solar cell 12 using various techniques, which may depend on, among other things, the type of support material used in the flexible support layer 18. For example, PI-2611 polyimide may be spin-coated onto the back surface 24 of the solar cell 12 and then cured in an oven at 350° C. for 30 minutes in an N.sub.2 environment.
(20) The flexible support layer 18 may have a cross-sectional thickness T.sub.1, which may be measured from the back surface 24 of the solar cell 12 to the back surface 36 of the flexible support layer 18. The cross-sectional thickness T.sub.1 may depend on, among other things, the type of support material used for the flexible support layer 18, the overall size of the solar cell 12 and/or the desired amount of flexibility. In one particular implementation, the flexible support layer 18 may have a cross-sectional thickness T.sub.1 ranging from about 5 to about 20 microns.
(21) The reflective layer 20 may include one or more layers of reflective material positioned proximate the back surface 36 of the flexible support layer 18 to reflect incoming radiation back to the solar cell 12. As such, the reflective layer 20 may have a sufficiently high reflectance at the wavelengths of interest. In a first expression, the reflective layer 20 may have a reflectance of at least 90 percent at wavelengths at and above 750 nanometers. In a second expression, the reflective layer 20 may have a reflectance of at least 95 percent at wavelengths at and above 750 nanometers. In a third expression, the reflective layer 20 may have a reflectance of at least 97 percent at wavelengths at and above 750 nanometers.
(22) The reflective layer 20 may include one or a combination of reflective materials. Examples of suitable reflective materials for forming the reflective layer 20 include gold, silver and aluminum. Other suitable reflective materials will be apparent to those skilled in the art. In one particular expression, the reflective material may have a coefficient of thermal expansion that closely matches the coefficients of thermal expansion of the other components of the solar cell structure 10.
(23) The reflective layer 20 may be applied using various techniques, which may depend on, among other things, the type of material used to form the reflective layer 20. For example, the reflective layer 20 may be a metal film layer and may be applied using standard metal deposition technology, such as e-beam evaporation or metal sputtering.
(24) The reflective layer 20 may have a cross-sectional thickness T.sub.2. While the cross-sectional thickness T.sub.2 may depend on various factors, as an example, the cross-sectional thickness T.sub.2 may range from about 0.1 to about 2 microns.
(25) Thus, the flexible support layer 18 may mechanically support the solar cell structure 10, while the reflective layer 20 may redirect incoming electro-magnetic radiation that has passed through the solar cell 12 back to the solar cell 12, thereby potentially improving the operating efficiency of the solar cell 12 and minimizing heat accumulation.
(26) In another aspect, the solar cell structure 10 may be manufactured using the steps illustrated in
(27) As shown in
(28) As shown in
(29) As shown in
(30) As shown in
(31) As shown in
(32) After the temporary handle wafer 52 has been attached, the temporary substrate 50 may be removed, as shown in
(33) As shown in
(34) As shown in
(35) Finally, as shown in
(36) Accordingly, the disclosed solar cell structure 10 may include a flexible support layer 18 for mechanically supporting the solar cell 12, such as a thin, flexible inverted metamorphic solar cell, and a reflective layer 20 for redirecting incoming light back to the solar cell 12, thereby increasing efficiency and reducing heat accumulating within the solar cell structure 10. Furthermore, in inverted metamorphic solar cell applications, the base of the lowest bandgap metamorphic cell may purposefully be grown thinner, due to the incorporation of the reflective layer 20.
(37) Although various aspects of the disclosed solar cell structure and method have been shown and described, modifications may occur to those skilled in the art upon reading the specification. The present application includes such modifications and is limited only by the scope of the claims.