Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Vernie Everett, Andrew Blakers, Klaus Weber, Evan Franklin Handling, Assembly, and Electrical Interconnection of 2 nd Generation SLIVER Solar Cells
2
3D 2D
3
Silicon wafer single crystal 150mm Ø 1-3mm thick 100mm Grooves formed through the wafer Following grooving, wafer processing proceeds: Diffusions, oxidations, depositions, metallisation. 0.04 to 0.1mm pitch
4
0.1mm 2mm 100mm Illumination ~1,000 completed bifacial SLIVER solar cells, each ~ 2 cm 2 Cuts
5
Sliver Solar Cell Cross-Section Illumination Perfectly bifacial Metal (n-electrode) Metal (p-electrode) Boron diffusion Phosphorus diffusion Surface texturing Phosphorus diffusion AR coating 20-50 m 1-2mm
6
A 2 nd Generation SLIVER Technology Reduce Grooving Pitch and SLIVER Thickness Strong cost driver Major challenges Advantage: with 40 micron pitch, 2.5X surface area increase over 100 micron pitch, at near-zero cost increase. Reduce SLIVER Cell Fabrication Complexity 1 st Generation SLIVER cell fabrication required 59 steps 2 nd Generation SLIVER cell fabrication requires only 32 steps Simplify texturing, improve light-trapping and AR-coating Broaden Process Windows and Improve Yield and Efficiency Robust processes with broad process windows Improve yield: essential for simplified handling and assembly Improve efficiency. Long term, efficiency will be the deciding factor 1. SLIVER cell fabrication
7
A 2 nd Generation SLIVER Technology A fundamental change in handling philosophy Abandoned individual, sequential linear processes. Moved to group handling modular parallel processes. Improved yield through simplified separation, “bulk” handling, and a simplified structure. Improved throughput with modular process line, with input and output buffers. Modular sub-assemblies Conventional cell “analogues” Avoid individual testing and binning Versatility through modularity Two main sub-assembly types: “Rafts”, and “Sheets”. Separation and handling processes are common for both. Applications are common for both: cost and efficiency are the only differences. Rafts and Sheets can be the building blocks of all SLIVER applications. 2. SLIVER handling and assembly
8
A SLIVER Raft
9
A Flexible SLIVER Raft
10
Flexible SLIVER Raft Assembly
11
SLIVER cells Soldered electrical interconnections Simplified process Eliminated stencilling Eliminated dispensing Eliminated cleaning and waste Eliminated machine vision Eliminated complex automation Robust process Simplified alignment requirements “Automatic” solder volume and location and distribution Conventional materials reliability, durability, warranty A 2 nd Generation SLIVER Technology 3. SLIVER electrical interconnections Equipment: low-cost, low-tech, industry-standard. Process: robust, modular, buffered. Materials: conventional, low-cost, reliable. Throughput: 500 – 1,000 connections per second. Advantages:
12
A 2 nd Generation SLIVER Technology 3. SLIVER electrical interconnections (ctd.)
13
A 2 nd Generation SLIVER Technology A SLIVER module constructed using Raft Sub-module Technology
14
A 2 nd Generation SLIVER Technology Reduces silicon consumption by a factor of 10 - 20 Reduces wafer starts by a factor of 20 – 40 Reduces cell fabrication steps from 59 to 32 Simplifies cell fabrication equipment requirements Exceeds 20% cell efficiency [world first for thin production cells] Reduces assembly equipment cost by a factor of 10 Increases assembly line throughput by a factor of 10 Increases rate of electrical connection by factor of 100 Modularises the entire assembly process Establishes an entire assembly process using only conventional materials
15
A 2 nd Generation SLIVER Technology Conclusion Reduce present PV costs by two-thirds Rapidly grow market share Play a significant role in ameliorating climate change Mature SLIVER Technology can:
16
Thank You!
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.