Silver-carbon-nanotube composite metallization for increased durability of silicon solar cells against cell cracks

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Abstract

One of the ways to reduce the cost of solar electricity is to reduce the degradation rate of solar modules and extend their lifetime well beyond 30 years. The extended module lifetime translates to increased bankability of utility-scale PV projects. In this work, we specifically address cell-crack-induced degradation by introducing crack-tolerant metallization. We make use of low-cost, multi-walled carbon nanotubes embedded in commercial screen-printable silver pastes as a highly integratable engineering solution. When the carbon nanotubes are appropriately functionalized and incorporated into commercial silver pastes, the resulting metal contacts on solar cells, after screen-printing and firing, show exceptional fracture toughness. These composite metal contacts possess increased ductility, electrical gap-bridging capability greater than 50 μm, and “self-healing” to regain electrical continuity even after cycles of complete electrical failure under large strain. While providing crack-tolerant mechanical properties, the composite paste delivers similar beginning-of-life cell performance as the conventional silver paste.

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APA

Abudayyeh, O. K., Chavez, A., Han, S. M., Rounsaville, B., Upadhyaya, V., & Rohatgi, A. (2021). Silver-carbon-nanotube composite metallization for increased durability of silicon solar cells against cell cracks. Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells, 225. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.solmat.2021.111017

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