4.7 Article

Filament stretching during micro-extrusion of silver pastes enables an improved fine-line silicon solar cell metallization

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-16249-5

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Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL

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This article presents a method of reducing silver consumption in the metallization of heterojunction solar cells through filament stretching of polymer-based low-temperature curing Ag pastes, while also offering high production throughput potential. The experiments show that filament stretching can significantly reduce the width of Ag-electrodes and the amount of Ag laydown.
The metallization of heterojunction solar cells requires a further reduction of silver consumption to lower production costs and save resources. This article presents how filament stretching of polymer-based low-temperature curing Ag pastes during micro-extrusion enables this reduction while at the same time offering a high production throughput potential. In a series of experiments the relationship between the printing velocity and the filament stretching, thus the reduction of Ag-electrode widths and Ag laydown is evaluated. Furthermore, an existing filament stretching model for the parallel dispensing process is advanced further and utilized to calculate the elongational viscosity. The stretching effect enables a reduction of the Ag-electrode width by down to Delta w(f) = - 40%(rel.) depending on the nozzle diameter and paste type. The Ag laydown has been reduced from m(Ag,cal.) = 0.84 mg per printed line to only m(Ag,cal.) = 0.54 mg per printed Ag-electrode when 30 mu m nozzle openings are used, demonstrating the promising potential of parallel dispensing technology for the metallization of silicon heterojunction solar cells.

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