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PERC+: industrial PERC solar cells with rear Al grid enabling bifaciality and reduced Al paste consumption

Authors :
Christopher Kranz
Martin Kutzer
Matthias Müller
Robby Peibst
Holger Neuhaus
Stefan Steckemetz
Thorsten Dullweber
Ulrike Baumann
Torsten Weber
Helge Hannebauer
Phedon Palinginis
Alexander Fülle
Gerd Fischer
Source :
Progress in Photovoltaics: Research and Applications. 24:1487-1498
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Wiley, 2015.

Abstract

Passivated emitter and rear cell (PERC) solar cells are currently being introduced into mass production. In this paper, we report a novel PERC solar cell design that applies a screen-printed rear Al finger grid instead of the conventional full-area aluminum (Al) rear layer while using the same PERC manufacturing sequence. We name this novel cell concept PERC+ because it offers several advantages. In particular, the Al paste consumption of the PERC+ cells is drastically reduced to 0.15 g instead of 1.6 g for the conventional PERC cells. The Al fingers create 2-µm-deeper aluminum back surface fields, which increases the open-circuit voltage by 4 mV. The five-busbar Al finger grid enables bifacial applications of the PERC+ cells with front-side efficiencies up to 20.8% and rear-side efficiencies up to 16.5% measured with a black chuck. The corresponding bifaciality is 79%. When applied in monofacial modules where the white back sheet acts as external rear reflector, the efficiency of the PERC+ cells is estimated to 20.9%, which is comparable with conventional PERC cells. Whereas Institute for Solar Energy Research Hamelin developed the aforementioned PERC+ results, SolarWorld independently pioneered a very similar bifacial PERC+ cell process starting in 2014. Transfer into mass production has been successfully accomplished, and novel glass–glass bifacial PERC+ modules have been launched at the Intersolar 2015 based on a most simple, lean, and cost-effective bifacial cell process. These new bifacial PERC+ modules show an increase in annual energy yield between 5% and 25% in simulations, which is confirmed by first outdoor measurements. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Details

ISSN :
10627995
Volume :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Progress in Photovoltaics: Research and Applications
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........764bce5088786430739edfcbf3e21c08
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/pip.2712