Patent application number | Description | Published |
20090194153 | PHOTOVOLTAIC CELL COMPRISING A THIN LAMINA HAVING LOW BASE RESISTIVITY AND METHOD OF MAKING - Fabrication of a photovoltaic cell comprising a thin semiconductor lamina may require additional processing after the semiconductor lamina is bonded to a receiver. To minimize high-temperature steps after bonding, the p-n junction is formed at the back of the cell, at the bonded surface. In some embodiments, the front surface of the semiconductor lamina is not doped or is locally doped using low-temperature methods. The base resistivity of the photovoltaic cell may be reduced, allowing a front surface field to be reduced or omitted. | 08-06-2009 |
20100032007 | PHOTOVOLTAIC CELL COMPRISING A THIN LAMINA HAVING A REAR JUNCTION AND METHOD OF MAKING - Fabrication of a photovoltaic cell comprising a thin semiconductor lamina may require additional processing after the semiconductor lamina is bonded to a receiver. To minimize high-temperature steps after bonding, the p−n junction is formed at the back of the cell, at the bonded surface. In some embodiments, the front surface of the semiconductor lamina is not doped or is locally doped using low-temperature methods. The base resistivity of the photovoltaic cell may be reduced, allowing a front surface field to be reduced or omitted. | 02-11-2010 |
20100139755 | FRONT CONNECTED PHOTOVOLTAIC ASSEMBLY AND ASSOCIATED METHODS - A photovoltaic device is disclosed herein that, in various aspects, includes a conductive layer, and a substantially crystalline lamina with a first surface oriented toward the conductive layer and a second surface oriented away from the conductive layer. The lamina thickness is within the range between about 0.2 microns and about 50 microns. An aperture passes through the lamina from the first surface to the second surface. A connector in electrical communication with the conductive layer is disposed through the aperture. Methods of manufacture of the photovoltaic devise are also disclosed. | 06-10-2010 |
20100154873 | PHOTOVOLTAIC CELL COMPRISING CCONTACT REGIONS DOPED THROUGH LAMINA - In aspects of the present invention, a lamina is formed having opposing first and second surfaces. Heavily doped contact regions extend from the first surface to the second surface. Generally the lamina is formed by affixing a semiconductor donor body to a receiver element, then cleaving the lamina from the semiconductor donor body wherein the lamina remains affixed to the receiver element. In the present invention, the heavily doped contact regions are formed by doping the semiconductor donor body before cleaving of the lamina. A photovoltaic cell comprising the lamina is then fabricated. By forming the heavily doped contact regions before bonding to the receiver element and cleaving, post-bonding high-temperature steps can be avoided, which may be advantageous. | 06-24-2010 |
20100159630 | METHOD FOR MAKING A PHOTOVOLTAIC CELL COMPRISING CONTACT REGIONS DOPED THROUGH A LAMINA - In aspects of the present invention, a method is disclosed to form a lamina having opposing first and second surfaces. Heavily doped contact regions extend from the first surface to the second surface. Generally the lamina is formed by affixing a semiconductor donor body to a receiver element, then cleaving the lamina from the semiconductor donor body wherein the lamina remains affixed to the receiver element. In the present invention, the heavily doped contact regions are formed by doping the semiconductor donor body before cleaving of the lamina. A photovoltaic cell comprising the lamina is then fabricated. By forming the heavily doped contact regions before bonding to the receiver element and cleaving, post-bonding high-temperature steps can be avoided, which may be advantageous. | 06-24-2010 |
20100184248 | Creation and Translation of Low-Relieff Texture for a Photovoltaic Cell - Low-relief texture can be created by applying and firing frit paste on a silicon surface. Where frit contacts the surface at high temperature, it etches silicon, dissolving silicon in the softened glass frit. The result is a series of small, randomly located pits, which produce a near-Lambertian surface, suitable for use in a photovoltaic cell. This texturing method consumes little silicon, and is advantageously used in a photovoltaic cell in which a thin silicon lamina comprises the base region of the cell. When the lamina is formed by implanting ions in a donor wafer to form a cleave plane and cleaving the lamina from the donor wafer at the cleave plane, the ion implantation step will serve to translate texture formed at a first surface to the cleave plane, and thus to the second, opposing surface following cleaving. Low-relief texture formed by other methods can be translated from the first surface to the second surface in this way as well. | 07-22-2010 |
20100229928 | BACK-CONTACT PHOTOVOLTAIC CELL COMPRISING A THIN LAMINA HAVING A SUPERSTRATE RECEIVER ELEMENT - A photovoltaic assembly comprises a thin semiconductor lamina and a receiver element, where the receiver element serves as a superstrate in the completed device. The photovoltaic assembly includes a photovoltaic cell. The photovoltaic cell is a back-contact cell; photocurrent passes into and out of the back surface of the cell, but does not pass through the light-facing surface. The lamina is typically substantially crystalline and has a thickness less than about 100 microns, in some embodiments 10 microns or less. | 09-16-2010 |
20100240169 | METHOD TO MAKE ELECTRICAL CONTACT TO A BONDED FACE OF A PHOTOVOLTAIC CELL - A photovoltaic cell is formed by bonding a donor body to a receiver element and cleaving a thin lamina from the donor body. Electrical contact is made to the bonded surface of the lamina through vias formed in the lamina. In some embodiments the emitter exists only at the bonded surface or only at the cleaved surface face; the emitter does not wrap through the vias between the surfaces. Wiring contacting each of the two surfaces is formed only at the cleaved face, and one set of wiring contacts the bonded surface through conductive material formed in the vias, insulated from the via sidewalls. | 09-23-2010 |
20100317145 | SELECTIVE ETCH FOR DAMAGE AT EXFFOLIATED SURFACE - Ions are implanted into a silicon donor body, defining a cleave plane. A first surface of the donor body is affixed to a receiver element, and a lamina is exfoliated at the cleave plane, creating a second surface of the lamina. There is damaged silicon at the second surface, which will compromise the efficiency of a photovoltaic cell formed from the lamina. A selective etchant, having an etch rate which is positively correlated with the concentration of structural defects in silicon, is used to remove the damaged silicon at the second surface, while removing very little of the relatively undamaged lamina. | 12-16-2010 |
20110073175 | PHOTOVOLTAIC CELL COMPRISING A THIN LAMINA HAVING EMITTER FORMED AT LIGHT-FACING AND BACK SURFACES - A photovoltaic cell is described having emitter portions formed at both a light-facing surface and a back surface of the cell. In some embodiments, heavily doped emitter regions extend between the front and back emitter regions, connecting them electrically. Use of this structure is particularly well-adapted to a cell formed by implanting a semiconductor donor body with hydrogen and/or helium ions, affixing the donor body to a receiver element, cleaving a lamina from the donor body, and completing fabrication of a photovoltaic cell comprising the lamina. The emitter portion formed at the unbonded surface may comprise amorphous silicon. The lamina may be thin, for example 10 microns thick or less. | 03-31-2011 |
20110143480 | MICROWAVE ANNEAL OF A THIN LAMINA FOR USE IN A PHOTOVOLTAIC CELL - A cleave plane is defined in a semiconductor donor body by implanting ions into the wafer. A lamina is cleaved from the donor body, and a photovoltaic cell is formed which comprises the lamina. The implant may cause some damage to the crystal structure of the lamina. This damage can be repaired by annealing the lamina using microwave energy. If the lamina is bonded to a receiver element, the receiver element may be either transparent to microwaves, or may reflect microwaves, while the semiconductor material absorbs the microwaves. In this way the lamina can be annealed at high temperature while the receiver element remains cooler. | 06-16-2011 |