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Basic Research Needs for Solar Energy Utilization - Office of ...

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Copper Indium Diselenide. From virtual obscurity as a semiconductor material, CIS solar cells<br />

have seen remarkable progress in efficiencies (see Figure 3) with 19.3% efficiency achieved<br />

recently in CIGS (with gallium added), nearly rivaling the best polycrystalline silicon laboratory<br />

devices. Commercial-size modules with >13% efficiency have been fabricated, and early<br />

commercial products are 9–11% efficient. The layer sequence <strong>for</strong> the device structure is<br />

substrate/Mo/CIGS/CdS/ZnO. High-efficiency devices (18.6%) have also been fabricated by<br />

replacing the CdS with ZnS (“cadmium-free” devices).<br />

The many elements in CIGS solar cells can <strong>for</strong>m a great variety <strong>of</strong> compounds during film<br />

growth and cell processing, making the CIGS system very complicated. On the other hand, it is<br />

also very tolerant <strong>of</strong> defects and impurities because the chemistry, as well as the structure, can<br />

adjust in many possible ways. The most striking feature <strong>of</strong> CIGS is the tolerance <strong>of</strong> the electrical<br />

properties to deposition approaches (and hence manufacturing processes).<br />

The substrate may be either glass or a flexible material (e.g., stainless steel or polyimide) in a<br />

roll-to-roll arrangement. Flexible, lightweight CIGS products are being sold <strong>for</strong> consumer and<br />

some military applications. The other process involves sputtering <strong>of</strong> the metals with prescribed<br />

conditions, followed by a selenization (and occasionally sulfurization) step at high temperature<br />

(~500 o C, ~1 hr) in a H2Se (and H2S) atmosphere. Several megawatts <strong>of</strong> PV products are being<br />

fabricated by this process.<br />

Materials Supply <strong>for</strong> Present PV Systems. The issue <strong>of</strong> available future supplies <strong>of</strong> various<br />

elements used in present PV cells is summarized in Table 2.<br />

Polycrystalline Thin-film Multijunctions. The successes to date with CdTe and CIGS recently<br />

generated ef<strong>for</strong>ts to develop possible routes, combinations <strong>of</strong> materials, and device structures<br />

toward demonstrating a multijunction polycrystalline thin-film solar cell with an efficiency<br />

>25% (and, ultimately, module efficiencies >20%). The materials selected <strong>for</strong> the initial studies<br />

are based on CIGS and CdTe and related alloys, but other materials are also being investigated<br />

(Symko-Davies 2004).<br />

Thin Crystalline Silicon. An emerging thin-film technology area is thin-film crystalline silicon<br />

deposited on low-cost substrates. This possibility could combine the inherent advantages <strong>of</strong><br />

silicon (abundance and device stability) with that <strong>of</strong> thin films (low materials use and cell<br />

interconnection during film deposition). The ef<strong>for</strong>ts in this area fall into two general categories.<br />

The first is to develop microcrystalline silicon bottom cells <strong>for</strong> dual- or triple-junction a-Si:H<br />

devices. The second area involves thin crystalline silicon films (thickness typically from

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