Previous studies on dispensing as an alternative front side metallization process in crystalline silicon photovoltaics demonstrated, how an adaption of paste rheology allows for a precise adjustment of contact finger geometry in a wide range. In order to demonstrate the benefit of this advantage, the analytical simulation tool Gridmaster was extended to observe the effect of various geometrical parameters on solar cell results and manufacturing costs. In addition, respective geometrical parameters of thick film printed contact fingers were determined using a special in house developed tool based on MATLAB. As a result, contact geometries as achievable by means of ultrafine line dispensing are ideally suited for contacting silicon solar cells. Compared with standard fine line single screen printed finger geometries, an efficiency increase of up to Δη = 0.4%abs. as well as a reduction of manufacturing costs of 1 €ct./Wp on module level can be achieved using dispensing technology. In order to obtain suitable data, simulation results were compared with solar cell results on industrial pre-processed Cz-Si p-type wafer material applying the novel ten nozzle parallel fine line dispensing unit. Therefore, a new dispensing paste was developed combining optimum optical finger aspect ratios of ARo=0.7 with excellent contacting behavior. A successful first test of applicability already led to a maximum cell efficiency of η = 18.7%, demonstrated on an industrial emitter with a sheet resistance of around Rsh = 90 Ω/sq
In order to enhance dispensing technology towards an industrial application in Silicon Photovoltaics, in particular throughput rate has to be increased. For this reason, a novel parallel high precision fine line dispensing unit is currently being developed at Fraunhofer ISE providing one nozzle per contact finger and a central Paste supply. In order to ensure a homogeneous paste distribution to all nozzles, the influence of paste rheology on the flow profile of the dispensing nozzles was analyzed. An analytical comparison of two different dispensing pastes with water gave a good insight on the influence of paste rheology on flow patterns inside the dispensing nozzles. Furthermore, numerical CFD-simulation (CFD: Computational Fluid Dynamics) was used to investigate different nozzle geometries and finally print head designs. In various iteration steps, the influence of fabrication tolerances especially concerning the nozzle geometry was isolated and print head designs were optimized based on CFD towards maximum process stability. In the meantime, process optimization using a single nozzle approach led to an average finger width below 35 μm, confirmed by several characterization methods
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