DocumentCode
3444622
Title
Inkjet printed contacts for use in photovoltaics
Author
Van Hest, Maikel F A M ; Curtis, Calvin J. ; Miedaner, Alex ; Pasquarelli, Robert M. ; John, K. ; Hersh, Peter ; Ginley, David S.
Author_Institution
Nat. Renewable Energy Lab., Golden, CO, USA
fYear
2009
fDate
7-12 June 2009
Abstract
Using direct-write approaches in photovoltaics for metallization and contact formation can significantly reduce the cost per watt of producing photovoltaic devices. Inks have been developed for various materials, such as Ag, Cu, Ni and Al, which can be used to inkjet print metallizations for various kinds of photovoltaic devices. Use of these inks results in metallization with resistivity close to those of bulk materials. By means of inkjet printing a metallization grid can be printed with better resolution, i.e. smaller lines, than screen-printing. For metallization on top of silicon photovoltaics also an ink has been developed that will facilitate the burn-through of the contact through the anti-reflection coating. Using this burn-through material may reduce the firing temperature by more than 100°C compared to conventional contact technology.
Keywords
aluminium; antireflection coatings; copper; elemental semiconductors; ink jet printing; metallisation; nickel; photovoltaic cells; silicon; silver; Ag; Al; Cu; Ni; Si; antireflection coating; burn-through material; contact formation; firing temperature; inkjet printing; metallization; photovoltaic devices; resistivity; silicon photovoltaics; Coatings; Conductivity; Costs; Firing; Ink; Inorganic materials; Metallization; Photovoltaic cells; Printing; Silicon;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Photovoltaic Specialists Conference (PVSC), 2009 34th IEEE
Conference_Location
Philadelphia, PA
ISSN
0160-8371
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-2949-3
Electronic_ISBN
0160-8371
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PVSC.2009.5411440
Filename
5411440
Link To Document