Engineers Develop Peel-and-Stick Solar Panels

29 Dec, 2012

via Stanford School of Engineering

Peel and stick solar panelsFor all their promise, solar cells have frus­trated sci­en­tists in one cru­cial regard—most are rigid. They must be deployed in stiff, often heavy, fixed pan­els, lim­it­ing their appli­ca­tions. So researchers have been try­ing to get pho­to­voltaics to loosen up. The ideal: flex­i­ble, decal-like solar pan­els that can be peeled off like band-aids and stuck to vir­tu­ally any sur­face, from papers to win­dow panes.

Now the ideal is real. Stanford researchers have suc­ceeded in devel­op­ing the world’s first peel-and-stick thin-film solar cells. The break­through is described in a paper in the December 20th issue of Scientific Reports.

Unlike stan­dard thin-film solar cells, the peel-and-stick ver­sion from Stanford does not require any direct fab­ri­ca­tion on the final car­rier sub­strate. This is a far more dra­matic devel­op­ment than it may ini­tially seem. All the chal­lenges asso­ci­ated with putting solar cells on uncon­ven­tional mate­ri­als are avoided with the new process, vastly expand­ing the poten­tial appli­ca­tions of solar technology.

Thin-film pho­to­voltaic cells are tra­di­tion­ally fixed on rigid sil­i­con and glass sub­strates, greatly lim­it­ing their uses, says Chi Hwan Lee, lead author of the paper and a PhD can­di­date in mechan­i­cal engi­neer­ing. And while the devel­op­ment of thin-film solar cells promised to inject some flex­i­bil­ity into the tech­nol­ogy, explains Xiaolin Zheng, a Stanford assis­tant pro­fes­sor of mechan­i­cal engi­neer­ing and senior author of the paper, sci­en­tists found that use of alter­na­tive sub­strates was prob­lem­atic in the extreme.

“Nonconventional or ‘uni­ver­sal’ sub­strates are dif­fi­cult to use for pho­to­voltaics because they typ­i­cally have irreg­u­lar sur­faces and they don’t do well with the ther­mal and chem­i­cal pro­cess­ing nec­es­sary to pro­duce today’s solar cells,” Zheng observes. “We got around these prob­lems by devel­op­ing this peel-and-stick process, which gives thin-film solar cells flex­i­bil­ity and attach­ment poten­tial we’ve never seen before, and also reduces their gen­eral cost and weight.”

Utilizing the process, Zheng con­tin­ues, researchers attached their solar cells to paper, plas­tic and win­dow glass among other materials.

“It’s sig­nif­i­cant that we didn’t lose any of the orig­i­nal cell effi­ciency,” Zheng said.

he new process involves a unique sil­i­con, sil­i­con diox­ide and metal “sand­wich.” First, a 300-nanometer film of nickel (Ni) is deposited on a silicon/silicon diox­ide (Si/SiO2) wafer. Thin-film solar cells are then deposited on the nickel layer uti­liz­ing stan­dard fab­ri­ca­tion tech­niques, and cov­ered with a layer of pro­tec­tive poly­mer. A ther­mal release tape is then attached to the top of the thin-film solar cells to aug­ment their trans­fer off of the pro­duc­tion wafer and onto a new substrate.

The solar cell is now ready to peel from the wafer. To remove it, the wafer is sub­merged in water at room tem­per­a­ture and the edge of the ther­mal release tape is peeled back slightly, allow­ing water to seep into and pen­e­trate between the nickel and sil­i­con diox­ide inter­face. The solar cell is thus freed from the hard sub­strate but still attached to the ther­mal release tape. Zheng and team then heat the tape and solar cell to 90°C for sev­eral sec­onds, then the cell can be applied to vir­tu­ally any sur­face using double-sided tape or other adhe­sive. Finally, the ther­mal release tape is removed, leav­ing just the solar cell attached to the cho­sen substrate.

Tests have demon­strated that the peel-and-stick process reli­ably leaves the thin-film solar cells wholly intact and func­tional, Zheng said. “There’s also no waste. The sil­i­con wafer is typ­i­cally undam­aged and clean after removal of the solar cells, and can be reused.”

While oth­ers have been suc­cess­ful in fab­ri­cat­ing thin-film solar cells on flex­i­ble sub­strates before, those efforts have required mod­i­fi­ca­tions of exist­ing processes or mate­ri­als, noted Lee. “The main con­tri­bu­tion of our work is we have done so with­out mod­i­fy­ing any exist­ing processes, facil­i­ties or mate­ri­als, mak­ing them viable com­mer­cially. And we have demon­strated our process on a more diverse array of sub­strates than ever before,” Lee said.

“Now you can put them on hel­mets, cell phones, con­vex win­dows, portable elec­tronic devices, curved roofs, clothing—virtually any­thing,” said Zheng.

Moreover, peel-and-stick tech­nol­ogy isn’t nec­es­sar­ily restricted to thin-film solar cells, Zheng said. The researchers believe the process can also be applied to thin-film elec­tron­ics, includ­ing printed cir­cuits and ultra thin tran­sis­tors and LCDs.

“Obviously, a lot of new products—from ‘smart’ cloth­ing to new aero­space systems—might be pos­si­ble by com­bin­ing both thin-film elec­tron­ics and thin-film solar cells,” observed Zheng. “And for that mat­ter, we may be just at the begin­ning of this tech­nol­ogy. The peel-and-stick qual­i­ties we’re research­ing prob­a­bly aren’t restricted to Ni/SiO2. It’s likely many other mate­r­ial inter­faces demon­strate sim­i­lar qual­i­ties, and they may have cer­tain advan­tages for spe­cific appli­ca­tions. We have a lot left to investigate.”

Source: Stanford School of Engineering release.

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