Leland Teschler
Editor
Picture an ordinary plastic soda bottle
with solar cells inked onto its surface. That
image comes close to the goal of work now
underway at a number of start-up companies all trying to produce solar cells made
from inexpensive plastic.
The substrates of choice for many of
these efforts include polycarbonate (PC),
polyethylene (PE), and polyethyleneter
aphthalate (PET), the same kind of polymer used for ordinary soft-drink and food
containers. The light-sensitive material
goes on via processes that are analogous
to ink jetting or other printing techniques.
Cell fabrication typically takes place on
substrate material that is spooled from
rolls. These continuous roll-to-roll manufacturing procedures can be inherently
fast and economical.
Contrast roll-to-roll methods with those
for conventional solar cells. Conventional
cells use silicon substrates resembling
those of integrated circuits. And as in ICs,
cell features take shape through chemical-vapor deposition and etching steps
in vacuum chambers at relatively high
temperatures. The resulting material can
convert sunlight to electrical energy more efficiently than plastic. Cell maker Sun Power Corp. , for example, claims its cells
are 21% efficient, compared to the 3 to 5%
efficiency of today's plastic cells. But just as with ICs, conventional solar cells get
manufactured in batches. The batch processes are fundamentally less economical
than techniques that are continuous.
The economies of roll-to-roll methods
can make plastic cells inexpensive enough
to be practical in a number of uses where
low price is more important than a high
conversion efficiency. Konarka Technologies Inc., Lowell, Mass., for example, says
its Power Plastic material can go into
laptops and PDAs, can power sensor net
works, or even be a power-generating skin
for tents, awnings, and roofs.
Though many firms are pursuing plastic cells, Konarka may be among those
that are the farthest along to large-scale
commercialization. It has worked with the
German firm Leonhard Kurz GmbH & Co
to devise a high-speed press capable of
producing Power Plastic cells. According to Konarka officials, Kurz presses are
expected to be able to print solar material on wide webs of plastic substrates at
high rates. Konarka says samples from
this line are now in the hands of customers for evaluation.
An appreciation for the promise of roll-to-roll cell making comes from a at look at
Konarka's process. According to Konarka
Director of Electronic Printing Technologies Eitan Zeira, many of its details are
proprietary, but the overall sequence of
steps involved are not. The semiconducting polymers that make up the photosensitive layers of the cell (called conjugated
polymers in industry parlance) are created in batches of several liters each.
Their final form is that of a fluffy powder.
When manufacturers are ready to use the
material, they combine it with standard
industrial solvents common in printing to create an ink or coatable liquid.
The semiconducting polymers can
be applied through any of several deposition methods. These methods are still
evolving. But Zeira says that many printing techniques are candidates for solar-cell fabrication. Offset printing is the only
method that doesn't look promising, he
says, because the conjugate polymer inks
are just too runny.
A roll-to-roll pilot line at Konarka, upon
which the Kurz cell fabrication equipment is based, contains five stands. Each
stand corresponds to a layer of the solar
cell. The coating technology used is analogous to that of a slot die (extrusion) or
slide coater. First to go on the substrate
is a semitransparent electrode, typically a transparent
conductive oxide layer (TCO).
Next comes a
patterning step
that separates
the cells from
each other so
they can later
connect in series. Active layers deposit next
followed by a
top electrode
to complete the active stack. The completed cells are cut apart and laminated to produce voltage outputs dictated by
customers.
All of these layers are quite thin. The
base TCO layer, for example is about
100-nm thick. Some of the active layers of
semiconducting polymers are only tens of
nanometers deep. Such shallow layers dry
quickly and thus promote use of fast web
speeds.
Key to making the process practical is
in the quality of the application process.
Pin holes in the applied material, for example, introduce shorts between layers.
Zeira says Konarka has tweaked its printing methodologies to ensure the critical
middle layers are pinhole-free.
Another strategic step in fabrication
consists of heating that creates islands
of crystals within otherwise amorphous
polymer. This annealing process happens at about 110°C and once took about
10 min. But Konarka says it has found a
way to get the right nanostructure with
just a few seconds of heat.
Cleanliness during deposition is also
important. But rather than encase the
whole production line in a clean room to
keep out dust, Konarka seals off only the
coating stations themselves. This lets the
entire line reside in an ordinary factory environment so long as the air isn't filthy.
The cells coming off Konarka's roll-to-roll line today are about 3% efficient. The
company has devised a new cell structure
that is over 5% efficient and intends to use
it future products. But high efficiency isn't
paramount in many of the applications
envisioned for plastic cells.
"Customers don't care about efficiency,
they care about total power," explains Eitan Zeira. "If you need more power from
a plastic cell, you just make the footprint
longer."
Konarka Technologies Inc., konarka.com
Inside a polymer solar cell
For its plastic solar cells, Konarka starts by creating batches of semiconducting polymers that also contain fullerenes. This material combination gets deposited in what's
called a bulk heterojunction cell structure.
The cell is built on an ordinary plastic substrate onto which a transparent conductive oxide (TCO) electrode is first deposited. A layer of intrinsically conductive polymer (ICP) then goes on to serve as a buffer to the TCO and as a source of charge injection for the next layer, the semiconducting polymer blend. This latter layer undergoes
annealing to create crystalline islands that facilitate light-induced charge separation.
When exposed to light, electrons automatically go to the lower work function contact,
holes to the one with the higher work function.
The structure diagramed here is about 3% efficient. Konarka is also working on a
modified structure that includes an optical spacer between the conjugated polymer
blend and the aluminum contact which boosts conversion efficiency to about 5%. |