Boosting solar cell efficiency is seen as a key factor in making them
more practical, but there is another way of looking at the matter ...
if the price of those cells were lowered, we could generate
more power simply by using more of them. That’s where Mississippi-based
Twin Creeks Technologies comes into the picture. The company has
developed a method of making crystalline silicon wafers which it says
could reduce the cost of solar cell production by half.
Ordinarily, when crystalline silicon wafers are being made for use in
solar cells, a chunk of silicon is cut into wafers that are each 200
micrometers thick. According to Twin Creeks, however, only the very
surface of that wafer is “active” – the rest is wasted. Much less waste
would occur if the wafers could be made thinner, but using traditional
production techniques, such wafers would be too fragile to stand up to
the rigors of photovoltaic panel production.
In Twin Creeks’ proprietary Hyperion process, three-millimeter-thick
disks of crystalline silicon are placed in a vacuum chamber, where
they’re bombarded with a beam of hydrogen ions. The ion accelerator
that’s used is reportedly ten times more powerful than anything else
commercially available.
Through control of the voltage of its beam, a layer of ions is precisely deposited on each disk. Those ions proceed to penetrate the silicon, so they’re located just below its surface. The disks are then robotically transferred to a furnace and heated. This causes the ions to expand into microscopic bubbles of hydrogen gas, which in turn causes a 20-micrometer-thick layer of silicon to peel off the surface of each disk. A supportive metal backing is then applied to that layer, and it’s ready for use.
The disks can be reused up to 14 times, each time “exfoliating” another layer of silicon.
The resulting ultra-thin wafers are claimed to be at least as
efficient as their thicker traditional counterparts, yet require 90
percent less silicon to produce. The system can be added to existing
production lines, although because less tools are required, production
costs should also be significantly reduced. Additionally, the technology
can be used with other single-crystal materials such as gallium nitride
and germanium.
Presently, the technology can be seen in action at Twin Creeks’
commercial demonstration plant in Senatobia, Mississippi. The company
intends to license the Hyperion system to existing solar cell
manufacturers.
Source: Twin Creeks Technologies via Technology Review
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