SBIR-STTR Award

A Light-Induced Aluminum Plating Tool for Substitution of Silver in Silicon Solar Cells
Award last edited on: 12/28/2020

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
DOE
Total Award Amount
$200,000
Award Phase
1
Solicitation Topic Code
11b
Principal Investigator
Lewis Ricci

Company Information

TG Companies LLC

16038 East Tumbleweed Drive
Fountain Hills, AZ 85268
   (817) 965-1286
   N/A
   www.tg-companies.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 06
County: Maricopa

Phase I

Contract Number: DESC0020722
Start Date: 6/29/2020    Completed: 6/28/2021
Phase I year
2020
Phase I Amount
$200,000
Today’s silicon solar cells employ screen-printed silver as the front-side electrode. Silver is expensive as the fabrication cost from wafers to cells is ~$0.10/cell today and silver accounts for ~50% of that cost. Replacing silver with aluminum is a critical step to achieve higher solar penetration at affordable prices as the cost of aluminum is a tiny fraction of the silver cost. This SBIR/STTR project aims to develop a new aluminum plating tool for a front-side aluminum electrode in silicon solar cells based on a proprietary technology, light-induced aluminum plating. Our technology enables a simpler aluminum electrode than the competing technology, thus reducing processing costs, improving module reliability and lifetime, while maintaining high cell efficiencies. The objective of this Phase I project is to develop a prototype light- induced aluminum plating tool for commercial-size silicon solar cells. It involves optimization of the light-induced aluminum plating process, demonstration of low contact resistance in the milli-Ohm-centimeter-squared range, and demonstration of reliable and reproducible aluminum plating on silicon solar cells. The deliverable of Phase I is a functional prototype light- induced aluminum plating tool that produces low resistivity, low contact resistance, adherent, and uniform aluminum electrodes on silicon solar cells. In Phase II our plan is to develop a commercial R&D version of this tool and sell it to solar companies so they can try out the new aluminum electrode on their own. This will help the adoption of the technology. A production version of this tool will be developed in partnership with a plating tool company.

Phase II

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