Field of the Invention
[0001] The present invention relates to methods of making structures incorporating ternary
and higher order compound semiconductors, to such structures, and to electronic devices
including such structures.
Background of the Invention
[0002] Photovoltaics is concerned with direct conversion of light or solar energy into electricity
through the use of active electronic devices called solar cells. Solar cells are commonly
fabricated on wafers of polycrystalline or single crystal silicon. However, the cost
of electricity generated using silicon-based solar cells is rather high, compared
to electricity available from typical electrical power system grids. The production
cost of the photovoltaic product is often represented in units of dollars per watt
generated under standard 100 mW/cm
2 illumination intensity.
[0003] To make thin film solar cell technology competitive with common silicon-based photovoltaic
products and with the traditional methods of electric power generation, a film growth
technique has to be developed that can deposit solar cell grade, electronically active
layers of the absorber materials and other components of the solar cells on large
area substrates, using cost effective approaches with high throughput and high materials
utilization. Therefore, there has been a continuous effort to develop low cost solar
cells, based on thin film polycrystalline compound semiconductor absorber layers.
[0004] Group IB-IIIA-VIA materials are promising as the absorber layers of high efficiency
thin film solar cells. In fact, a comparatively high efficiency thin film device has
already been produced on a Cu(In,Ga)Se
2 absorber film grown by a vacuum evaporation technique. A demonstrated conversion
efficiency of over 17% confirmed the capability of this material to yield quite efficient
active devices when employed in thin film solar cell structures.
[0005] The electrical and optical properties of Group IB-IIIA-VIA compound films depend
on their chemical composition, defect chemistry and structure, which in turn are related
to the film growth techniques and parameters. There are a variety of deposition techniques
that have been used for the growth of Group IB-IIIA-VIA compound semiconductor films.
However, it is crucial to obtain a material that has the good optoelectronic and structural
properties which are needed for the production of active electronic devices such as
solar cells.
[0006] In solar cells based on a Group IB-IIIA-VIA absorber film, appreciable amounts of
the binary phases, such as Group IIIA-VIA compounds and especially Group IB-VIA compounds,
in the absorber film, typically deteriorate the electronic properties of the compound,
and thus the characteristics of the solar cells. In addition, it is considered desirable
to have an absorber material with columnar grains equivalent to at least about 0.5
µm diameter, in thin film solar cell structures. Furthermore, for commercial viability,
the technique should be able to deposit a layer that is relatively uniform compositionally
onto very large substrates, such as several ft
2 in area (1 ft
2 ≈ 0.093 m
2), using low cost equipment and processes.
[0007] A significant compositional parameter of Group IB-IIIA-VIA thin films is the molar
ratio of the Group IB element or elements to the Group IIIA element or elements. This
is commonly referred to as the I/III ratio. Typically an acceptable range of the I/III
molar ratio for the Cu-containing solar cell using Group IB-IIIA-VIA materials is
about 0.80-1.0, although in some cases involving extrinsic doping with a dopant such
as Na, this ratio can go even lower to about 0.6. If the I/III ratio exceeds 1.0,
a low resistivity copper selenide phase typically precipitates and deteriorates the
performance of the device.
[0008] One technique that has yielded relatively good quality Group IB-IIIA-VIA films for
solar cell fabrication is co-evaporation of Group IB, IIIA and VIA elements onto heated
substrates. As described by Bloss et al. in their review article ("Thin Film Solar
Cells",
Progress in Photovoltaics, vol. 3, pages 3-24, 1995), the film growth in this technique takes place in a high
vacuum chamber and the evaporation rates of the Group IB and Group IIIA elements are
carefully controlled to keep the overall I/III ratio of the film in the acceptable
range.
[0009] However, the evaporation method is not readily adaptable to low cost production of
large area films, mainly because uniform deposition by evaporation on large area substrates
is difficult, and the cost of vacuum equipment is high. Co-sputtering of Group IB
and Group IIIA elements such as Cu and In in the presence of Group VIA vapors such
as Se, has also been investigated as a possible method of compound film growth. However,
this technique suffers from yield problems, most probably due to poor capability to
control the I/III ratio.
[0010] Another technique for growing Group IB-IIIA-VIA compound thin films for solar cells
is a two-stage process where at least two components of the Group IB-IIIA-VIA material
are first deposited onto a substrate, and then reacted with each other and/or with
a reactive atmosphere in a high temperature annealing process. US-A-4 581 108 issued
to Vijay K. Kapur et al. in 1986, US-A-4 798 660 issued to James H. Ermer et al. in
1989, and US-A-5 028 274 issued to Bulent M. Basol et al. 1991 teach respectively
the methods of electrodeposition of Group IB and IIIA elements onto a substrate followed
by selenization or sulfidation, DC magnetron sputtering of Cu and In layers on a substrate
followed by selenization, and deposition of Group IB and IIIA elements onto a substrate
previously coated with a thin Te film followed by selenization or sulfidation.
[0011] In the two-stage processes, large area magnetron sputtering techniques can be used
to deposit individual layers containing Group IB and Group IIIA elements for precursor
film preparation. In the case of CuInSe
2. growth, for example, Cu and In layers can be sputter-deposited on non-heated substrates
and then the composite film can be selenized in H
2Se gas or Se vapor at an elevated temperature, as is shown in US-A-4 798 660 and US-A-5
028 274.
[0012] The film growth techniques require strict control of the material composition during
the deposition process, with a typical goal that in the final film, the overall I/III
ratio be in the acceptable range of about 0.80-1.0. For mass production of photovoltaic
modules, this ratio should be uniform over large area substrates. In the two- stage
processes the uniformity and thickness of each layer has to be controlled.
[0013] When the I/III ratio is greater than 1.0, it causes the separation of a Cu-selenide
phase in Group IB-IIIA-VIA compound layers. Layers containing Cu-selenide phase have
low resistivities and typically are not used in active device fabrication. However,
these Cu-rich films have good structural characteristics and large grain sizes. The
relationship between the structural properties of Group IB-IIIA-VIA materials and
their composition can be used beneficially, especially in the co-evaporation approaches,
by intentionally increasing the I/III ratio above 1.0 during the film growth process
for improving the structural properties of the growing film, and then decreasing it
back to the acceptable range by the time the deposition process is terminated. Films
grown by such approaches often have large grain sizes and good electronic properties.
Therefore, it is typically allowable to change the I/III ratio during the deposition
and growth of a Group IB-IIIA-VIA compound, but with the overall ratio in the final
film being within the 0.80-1.0 range.
[0014] Since the uniformity and control of the I/III ratio throughout the material is important
for Group IB-IIIA-VIA compounds, attempts have been made to fix this ratio in a material,
before the deposition process, and then transfer this fixed composition into the thin
film formed using the material. Early attempts for CuInSe
2 growth by such an approach were by evaporation and by sputtering, using pre-formed
CuInSe
2 compound material as the evaporation source or the sputtering target. However, these
efforts did not yield solar cell grade material because of the lack of reproducible
compositional control, which may have resulted from Se and/or In
2Se loss in the vacuum environment. In the case of sputtering, the changing nature
of the target surface also presented a problem. A relatively efficient solar cell
was recently demonstrated on a layer obtained by laser ablation of a CuInSe
2 target (H. Dittrich et al.,
23rd IEEE PV Specialists Conference, 1993, page 617), however, such an approach is not practical for large scale production.
[0015] Other attempts to prepare Group IB-IIIA-VIA compound films using a material with
a pre-fixed composition have included screen printing layers onto substrates and their
conversion into the compound. T. Arita et al. in their 1988 publication (
20th IEEE PV Specialists Conference, 1988, page 1650) described a screen printing technique that involved: creating an
initial material by mixing pure Cu, In and Se powders in the compositional ratio of
1:1:2, milling these powders in a ball mill and forming a screen printable paste,
screen printing the paste on a substrate, and sintering this precursor film to form
the compound layer. The milling was done in a media such as water or ethylene glycol
monophenyl ether to reduce the particle size, and formation of a paste was done using
a propylene glycol binder. The paste material was deposited on a high temperature
borosilicate glass substrate by the screen printing method, forming a film. The post-deposition
treatment step consisted of annealing the film in nitrogen gas at 700 °C, to form
a compound film on the substrate.
[0016] For evaluating the photovoltaic characteristics of the resulting compound, thick
pellets were made from the material obtained as a result of the milling and sintering
steps, and solar cells were fabricated on them. Efficiencies of only about 1% were
reported for these devices. The researchers further reported that CdS/CuInSe
2 thin film junctions were also fabricated by depositing CdS film on the sintered CuInSe
2 films by RF sputtering, but concluded that they were not able to obtain better photovoltaic
characteristics than that in pellet samples. Their reported data indicated that In
powder was oxidized during the milling process, that Cu, In and Se were reacting with
each other during milling, and that the CuInSe
2 material obtained after the sintering process had a resistivity of about 1.0 ohm-cm.
This resistivity is only about 0.01-1% of the value for a typical CuInSe
2 film that yields efficient solar cells and may indicate the presence of a detrimental
Cu-Se phase. Also, the sintering temperature of 700 °C is very high for low cost solar
cell structures that employ soda-lime glass substrates.
[0017] Thin layers of CuInSe
2 deposited by a screen printing method were also reported by a research group at Universiteit
Gent in Belgium. A. Vervaet et al., in their 1989 publication (
9th European Communities PV Solar Energy Conference, 1989, page 480), referring to the work of T. Arita et al., indicated that indium
powder easily oxidizes, giving rise to unwanted phases, such as In(OH)
3 or In
2 O
3 in the final films. The technique of the Universiteit Gent research group, therefore,
employed the steps of: forming a CuInSe
2 powder as an initial material by crushing a CuInSe
2 ingot; grinding the CuInSe
2 powder in a ball mill; adding excess Se powder and other agents such as 1,2-propanediol
into the formulation to prepare a screen printable paste; screen printing layers onto
borosilicate and alumina substrates; and high temperature sintering of the layers
(above 500 °C) to form the compound films. A difficulty in this approach was finding
a suitable sintering aid or fluxing agent for CuInSe
2 film formation. Among many agents studied, copper selenide was the best for grain
growth, but films containing this phase could not be used for active device fabrication
since they had I/III ratios larger than 1.0.
[0018] More recently, the Universiteit Gent group experimented with CuTlSe
2, a compound with a relatively low (about 400 °C) melting point, as a fluxing agent.
In their 1994 publication (
12th European PV Solar Energy Conference, 1994, page 604), M. Casteleyn et al., used CuTlSe
2 in their formulation of the CuInSe
2 paste, and demonstrated grain growth for films with I/III ratios in an acceptable
range. However, the solar cells fabricated on the resulting layers were still poor
with conversion efficiencies of only of about 1%. The sintering temperature of above
600 °C used in this process was also high for low cost glass substrates. Using CuInSe
2 powder as the initial material did not produce good results because of the lack of
a good sintering aid that would not deleteriously affect the electronic properties
of the final film obtained by this technique. The sintering temperature employed in
the above referenced screen printing techniques was very high (>600 °C) for the use
of low cost substrates for the deposition of Group IB-IIIA-VIA compound films.
[0019] In addition to difficulties associated with controlling the macro-scale uniformity
of the I/III ratio over large area substrates, there are also concerns involving micro-scale
non-uniformities in Group IB-IIIA-VIA compound thin films. US-A-5 445 847, issued
to T. Wada et al. in 1995, the researchers treated a Group IB element layer and a
Group IIIA element layer with heat under the presence of the chalcogen to obtain a
chalcopyrite-type compound. They observed a deviation in a composition ratio of the
Group IB element to the Group IIIA element in the obtained compound, and stated that
the composition itself was not always microscopically constant. As a remedy to this
problem they used a Group IB-IIIA oxide composition, which has a high melting temperature,
instead of the element layers. They concluded that the Group IB-IIIA oxide composition
did not melt from the heat treatment temperature under a reducing atmosphere containing
the Group VIA element or containing the reducing compound of the Group VIA element,
and that the initial composition can be maintained in micro-scale. X-ray diffraction
data indicated the formation of the Group IB-IIIA-VIA phase. However, apparently no
data has been published on the electronic qualities of these layers, and no active
devices such as solar cells have been fabricated.
[0020] Another approach concerning the micro-scale control of the I/III ratio is indicated
in European Patent No. 93116575.7 (Publication No. 0595115A1, 1994) of T. Wada et
al. There, a chalcopyrite-type compound is prepared by annealing a thin film containing
Cu, In and an In compound or a compound which contains both In and Cu, selected from
the group consisting of oxides, sulfides and selenides, in an atmosphere containing
a Group VIA element. It is concluded that since a Cu/In ratio of less than about 1.0
is desired for a solar cell grade CuInSe
2 compound film, excess Group IIIA element In had to be present prior to annealing.
According to these researchers In would give rise to microscopic non-uniformities
in the layers because of its low melting point. Therefore, the idea was to replace
In with its high melting point oxide, sulfide or selenide. This was achieved by depositing
multi-layers onto substrates, just as in two-stage processes, and by their reaction
to form the desired compounds. Some of the examples of multi-layer depositions include
electron-beam evaporation or sputtering of a Cu layer and an In layer, followed by
sputtering or laser ablation of an indium oxide, indium sulfide or indium selenide,
co-deposition of a Cu
11 In
9 alloy layer followed by the deposition of a film of an oxide, selenide or sulfide
of In, deposition of a Cu layer and an In layer, followed by the deposition of an
indium oxide and then a copper oxide layer, or an indium selenide and a copper selenide
layer, or an indium sulfide and a copper indium sulfide layer.
[0021] A processing technique employing multi-layers of deposited materials containing the
Group IB and IIIA elements may address the issue of micro-scale - compositional uniformity
by including high melting point compounds in the layers, however, just as in simpler
two-stage processes, would not be expected to address the more important issue of
macro-scale uniformity of the I/III ratio. In other words, if multi layers containing
Group IB and IIIA elements need to be deposited on a large area substrate, the thickness
and the thickness uniformity of each layer containing the Group IB and/or IIIA elements
requires strict control. In that respect, compositional control for, e.g., Cu/In/In
2O
3 or a Cu/In/Cu
2In
2O
5 stack, for example, is more complicated than for the Cu/In stack of the simple two-stage
process.
[0022] As the above review of prior art demonstrates, there is a need for techniques to
provide Group IB-IIIA-VIA (and related) compound films on large area substrates, with
good compositional uniformity. There is also a need for such compound films with superior
electronic properties, that would make them suitable for the fabrication of active
electronic devices such as solar cells.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0023] In accordance with the invention, a method of forming a compound film includes the
steps of preparing a source material, depositing the source material on a base to
form a precursor film, and heating the precursor film in a suitable atmosphere to
form a film, as disclosed in claim 1 which follows. The source material includes Group
IB-IIIA alloy-containing particles having at least one Group IB-IIIA alloy phase,
with Group IB-IIIA alloys constituting greater than about 50 molar percent of the
Group IB elements and greater than about 50 molar percent of the Group IIIA elements
in the source material. The film, then, includes a Group IB-IIIA-VIA compound. The
molar ratio of Group IB to Group IIIA elements in the source material may be greater
than about 0.80 and less than about 1.0, or substantially greater than 1.0, in which
case this ratio in the compound film may be reduced to greater than about 0.80 and
less than about 1.0. The source material may be prepared as an ink from particles
in powder form. The alloy phase may include a dopant. Compound films including a Group
IIB-IVA-VA compound or a Group IB-VA-VIA compound may be substituted using appropriate
substitutions in the method, as disclosed in claim 29 which follows. The method, also,
is applicable to fabrication of solar cells and other electronic devices, as disclosed
in claims 25 and 27 which follow.
[0024] The foregoing and additional features and advantages of this invention will become
further apparent from the detailed description and accompanying drawing figures that
follow. In the figures and written description, numerals indicate the various features
of the invention, like numerals referring to like features, throughout for the drawing
figures and the written description.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0025]
Fig. 1 is a cross-sectional view of a solar cell, made in accordance with the present
invention.
Fig. 2 is a flow chart showing the steps of a method used to grow Group IB-IIIA-VIA
compound thin films, in accordance with the present invention.
Fig. 3 is a schematic drawing showing the composition of the starting material, in
accordance with the present invention.
Fig. 4A diagrammatically shows Group VIA particles in powder form being mixed with
a powder that includes Group IB-IIIA alloy-containing particles.
Fig. 4B diagrammatically shows the elimination of particles larger than a predetermined
size from the mixed powder of Pig. 4A.
Fig. 4C diagrammatically illustrates the powder with only the smaller particles being
mixed with a liquid as a step to form an ink.
Fig. 4D diagrammatically illustrates the powder-containing liquid being subjected
to milling to form an ink.
Fig. 4E diagrammatically illustrates the milled ink being deposited on a large substrate.
Fig. 4F diagrammatically illustrates the substrate with the deposited ink being subjected
to an atmosphere containing Group VIA elements and heated to form the Group IB-IIIA-VIA
compound film on the substrate.
Fig. 5 illustrates the X-ray diffraction data obtained from a precursor film, prepared
in accordance with the present invention.
Fig. 6 illustrates X-ray diffraction data obtained from a CuInSe2 film, prepared in accordance with the present invention.
Fig. 7 illustrates illuminated I-V characteristics of a solar cell, fabricated on
a CuInSe2 film grown in accordance with the present invention.
Fig. 8 illustrates the I-V characteristics of a solar cell, fabricated in accordance
with another embodiment of the present invention.
Fig. 9 illustrates the I-V characteristics of a solar cell, fabricated in accordance
with yet another embodiment of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0026] The typical general structure of a conventional Group IB-IIIA-VIA compound solar
cell, as well as one made in accordance with the present invention, is shown in Fig.
1. The device is fabricated on a substrate that includes a sub-layer 10, such as of
a glass material. P-type absorber film 12 is deposited over a conductive layer 11,
e.g. made of molybdenum (Mo), which acts as the back ohmic contact to the solar cell,
and which is a coating for the sub-layer of the substrate. The sub-layer 10 and its
coating 11 may together be regarded as the substrate.
[0027] An n-type transparent window layer 13 is formed on the p-type absorber film 12, through
which radiation enters the device. The solar cell is completed by depositing metallic
grid finger patterns 14 over the window layer 13, if needed. The most commonly used
p-type absorber films 12 are Group IB-IIIA-VIA absorber films 12, with compositions
that can be represented by the general chemical formula of CuInl
1-xGa
xSe
2(1-y)S
2y, where 0≤x≤1 and 0≤y≤1. This group of compounds is also represented by the general
chemical formula of Cu(In,Ga)(Se,S)
2.
[0028] Constituent elements of the representative specific compounds mentioned in this document
are grouped according to the notations of columns of the periodic table defined by
Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS), as shown in the CRC Handbook of Chemistry & Physics,
72nd edition, 1991-1992, published by CRC Press, Inc., e.g., the inside cover table.
[0029] A variety of materials, deposited by a variety of methods, can be used to provide
the components of the device depicted in Fig. 1. For example, the substrate sub-layer
10 can be rigid or flexible, conductive or insulating. Possible sub-layer 10 materials
include, but are not limited to, sheets or flexible foils of insulating sub-layers,
such as glass, alumina, mica or polyimide materials, or conductive materials, such
as Mo, tungsten (W), tantalum (Ta), titanium (Ti), aluminum (Al), nickel (Ni) and
stainless steel.
[0030] The conductive layer or coating 11 is made of a conductive material that provides
good ohmic contact to the Group IB-IIIA-VIA semiconductor absorber film 12, like Mo,
which is a preferred material, W, Ta, Ti, gold (Au), and nitrides or phosphides or
tellurides. The conductive layer 11, in fact, may consist of two or more layers of
materials. The conductive layer 11 is not needed if the sub-layer 10 is a conductive
material, that would provide good ohmic contact to the semiconductor absorber film
12.
[0031] The material of the Group IB-IIIA-VIA semiconductor absorber film 12, that can be
deposited using the teachings of this invention, is selected from the group consisting
of ternary or higher order selenides, sulfides and tellurides of copper (Cu), silver
(Ag), aluminum (Al), gallium (Ga), indium (In), thallium (Tl) and their alloys. The
preferred material for the layer of the absorber film 12 is CuIn
1-xGa
xSe
2 (1-y)S
2y, where 0≤x≤1 and 0≤y≤1. This layer may additionally contain dopants such as potassium
(K), sodium (Na), lithium (Li), phosphorus (P), arsenic (As), antimony (Sb) and bismuth
(Bi) to enhance its electronic properties.
[0032] The window layer 13 has one or more layers of transparent semiconductor materials
commonly used in solar cells, like cadmium (Cd), zinc (Zn) and sulfur (S) or selenium
(Se) compounds such as Cd(Zn)S and ZnSe, or transparent conductive oxides such as
ZnO, indium tin oxide, and tin oxide. Various layers may also be paired, to optimize
device performance. Possible structures of optimized window materials include, but
are not limited to, Cd(Zn)S/TCO, ZnSe/TCO, In(Ga)-selenide/TCO, In(Ga)-sulfide/TCO,
and In(Ga)-oxide/TCO, where TCO represents one or more layers of Transparent Conductive
Oxides such as ZnO, indium tin oxide, and tin oxide. The window layer 13 materials
can be deposited by various techniques well known in the art. As is conventionally
understood notations such as "Cd(Zn)S" and "In(Ga)" mean all compositions going from
pure CdS to pure ZnS and all compositions going from pure In to pure Ga.
[0033] The finger pattern 14 may be deposited on the device structure to reduce the series
resistance introduced by the window layer 13. In module structures employing narrow
solar cells there is no need for finger patterns 14. An anti-reflection coating (not
shown) can also be deposited over the window layer 13 to further improve the efficiency
of the finished solar cells.
[0034] The preferred electrical type of the Group IB-IIIA-VIA absorber film 12 of Fig. 1
is p-type, and the preferred type of the window layer 13 is n-type. However, an n-type
absorber and a p-type window layer can also be utilized. The preferred device structure
of Fig. 1 is commonly referred to as a "substrate-type" structure. A "superstrate-type"
structure can also be constructed by depositing a window layer first on a transparent
sheet substrate, such as one made of a glass material, then depositing the Group IB-IIIA-VIA
compound absorber film, and finally forming a back ohmic contact to the device by
a conductive layer. In this superstrate structure, solar energy or light enters the
device from the superstrate side which faces the solar energy or light.
[0035] Fig. 2 shows the general steps of a process 21 for deposition of Group IB-IIIA-VIA
compound films 27, where the desired I/III ratio is fixed in a source material 23
before film deposition, and this fixed composition is transferred into a precursor
film 25, used to form the Group IB-IIIA-VIA compound film 27. The starting material
20 is the initial material employed in a pre-deposition treatment step 22, which treats
the starting material 20 in a way to render it suitable for deposition onto a selected
substrate in the form of a precursor film 25. The result of the pre-deposition treatment
step 22 is the source material 23 which can be transferred onto the substrate in the
form of the precursor film 25, through the film deposition step 24. A post-deposition
treatment step 26 of the precursor film 25 forms the final Group IB-IIIA-VIA compound
film 27.
[0036] With reference to Fig. 2, the starting material 20 of the present invention is powder.
The composition of this powder is schematically shown in Fig. 3. In Fig. 3, the starting
material 20 includes the Group IB-IIIA alloy-containing particles 31, Group IB element
particles 32, Group IIIA element particles 33, and Group VIA element particles 34.
The Group IB-IIIA alloy-containing particles 31 may, in addition to the Group IB-IIIA
alloy phases, contain Group IIIA element phases such as In and/or Ga. The Group IB-IIIA
alloy phases that may be contained in particles 31 include, but are not limited to,
Cu
4In, Cu
2In, Cu
11In
9 , Cu
16In
9 , CUIn
2 , Cu
9In
4 , Cu
2In
3 , CuIn, Cu
2 In
4 , CuGa
2 , Cu
9 Ga
4 and alloys thereof. The exact phase content of the particles 31 depends on the method
of preparation and the targeted I/III ratio. For example, particles 31 that are obtained
by techniques which involve rapid cooling of melted Group IB-IIIA compositions are
likely to contain Group IB-IIIA alloy phases that exist at high temperatures. When
such powders are later annealed at lower temperatures, their content may change to
phases that are more stable at lower temperatures. Also more generally, the Group
IB and/or Group IIIA element particles 32 and 33 may not be present.
[0037] It is important that the I/III ratio in the Group IB-IIIA alloy-containing particles
31 is fixed and known beforehand, and that the overall I/III ratio of the starting
material 20 powder is fixed and known. For example, if the Group IB element is Cu
and the Group IIIA element is In, and the starting material 20 is a mixture of a Cu-In
alloy-containing powder, Cu powder and In powder, then it is preferred that Cu
31/(Cu
31+Cu
32)>0.9 and In
31/(In)
31+In
33) >0.9, where Cu
31 is the Cu molar content of the Cu-In alloy-containing particles 31, Cu
32 is the molar Cu content of the Cu particles 32, In
31 is the In molar content of the Cu-In alloy-containing particles 31, and In
33 is the In content of the particles 33.
[0038] With reference to Fig. 3, the preferred Group IB element is Cu and the preferred
Group IIIA elements are In and Ga. The preferred Group VIA element is at least one
selected from the group of Se, S and Te. The particles 31, 32, 33, 34 can be irregular
in shape or they can be round. The powders can be obtained by various methods known
to those skilled in the art of powder metallurgy. These techniques include, but are
not limited to, mechanical grinding of a bulk material, atomization or spinning of
a melt, hydro-metallurgical techniques, electrolytic techniques, precipitation methods
and spray pyrolysis. Recently developed spark erosion approaches and chemical techniques
used for nano-particle generation are also applicable to the preparation of the powders
used in the present invention.
[0039] Fig. 4A through 4F diagrammatically illustrates a process in accordance with the
invention and Fig. 2. Fig. 4A diagrammatically shows Group VIA particles 34 in powder
form being mixed with the other particles of Fig. 3, including the Group IB-IIIA alloy-containing
particles 31 to form the starting material of Fig. 3, represented at 20 in Fig. 2.
[0040] Fig. 4B diagrammatically shows the elimination of particles larger than a predetermined
size from the mixed powder of Fig. 4A. This elimination is diagrammatically represented
by passing the starting material through a screen 36. And this elimination is pre-deposition
treatment represented in Fig. 2 at 22.
[0041] Fig. 4C diagrammatically illustrates the powder with only the smaller particles being
mixed with a liquid as a step to form an ink. This is diagrammatically represented
by pouring the liquid 38 from a flask 41 into a beaker 40 containing the powder. This
is part of the pre-deposition treatment, represented in Fig. 2 at 22.
[0042] Fig. 4D diagrammatically illustrates the powder-containing liquid subjected to milling
for ink formation. This is also part of the pre-deposition treatment, represented
in Fig. 2 at 22 to decrease the particle size, even beyond the levels in starting
material 20. Simply for diagrammatic purposes, it is represented as accomplished through
a grinding structure 42, including a ball portion 44 that can be lowered into the
ink in the beaker 40 and revolve, thus breaking up the powder particles in the ink.
In practice, the typical ball milling procedure uses a ceramic milling jar filled
with grinding ceramic balls. When the jar is rotated or shaken, the balls shake and
grind the powder in the liquid medium to create the ink with small particles.
[0043] Fig. 4E diagrammatically illustrates the milled ink being deposited on a large substrate
46. This, of course, illustrates the film deposition, represented in Fig. 2 at 24,
and results in the precursor film, represented at 25 in Fig. 2, on the substrate.
[0044] Fig. 4F diagrammatically illustrates the substrate with the precursor film on it,
being subject to an atmosphere containing Group VIA elements (in vapor form) accompanied
by the application of heat to form the Group IB-IIIA-VIA compound film on the substrate,
such compound film represented at 27 in Fig. 2.
[0045] Referring back to Figs. 2 and 4D, the pre-deposition treatment step 22, as described,
involves milling. Milling can be carried out in liquid media such as water, alcohols
and other organic liquids, or it can be carried out dry. Milling can be carried out
at room temperature or at lower temperatures. The purpose of the milling step is to
reduce the size of the particles in the source material. This is important for micro-scale
uniformity of the films to be grown. The particle sizes generally should be smaller
than the thickness of the film to be grown, most typically, less than or equal to
2.0 µm. This may be determined by standard techniques which are used to assure that
substantially all of the particles in a group are less than or equal to a certain
size, such as conventional light scattering analysis. It is preferable that such techniques
show that less than 1% of the particles exceed this size, although less than 5% may
be acceptable. This size may typically be considered as the longest straight line
that could be drawn between two points on the surface of the particle. Source material
23 that is obtained as a result of the pre-deposition treatment step 22 may typically
be in the form of a paste, an ink, a solution, a dispersion or a dry powder.
[0046] If the particle sizes in the starting material powder 20 or such powder, e.g., after
sieving, meets the size requirement, the milling process may not be needed. For example,
in some techniques such as spark erosion, fine powders containing the Group IB-IIIA
alloys may be formed in a dielectric liquid such as water, or in a cryogenic, alcohol
or hydrocarbon liquid. It is also possible to mill the various components of the starting
material 20 separately, and then mix the milled components to form a starting material.
For example, for a starting material having only the Group IB-IIIA alloy-containing
particles 31 and Group VIA element particles 34, a powder of each of the two particle
types may be prepared and milled separately. After milling the two powders, they may
be mixed to form a starting material.
[0047] Source material 23 may additionally contain electrical dopants. These dopants may
originate from the starting material, for example, may be present as one or more separate
type of particle components of a mix similar to that in Fig. 3, or mixed in as additional
constituents of other particle components, including as constituents of a Group IB-IIIA
alloy. Thus, of course, as one method, they can be included in the form of additional
elemental powders or additional powders including dopant compounds, or even in a liquid.
As indicated in the examples, such dopants may also be included in the Group IB-IIIA-VIA
compound film at other points of the process. Group IA and/or Group VA elements typically
may serve as such dopants.
[0048] Referring to Fig. 2, the precursor film 25 is obtained by depositing the source material
23 on the substrate, which may be a two-layer substrate consisting of a sub-layer
and a coating layer , in the form of a film through the film deposition step 24. Various
techniques can be used for the film deposition step 24. For source materials 23 that
are in the form of pastes, screen printing techniques can be employed. If the source
material 23 is in the form of an ink or paint, many wet deposition techniques known
to those skilled in the art can be used, like painting by spray, brush, roller or
pad, gravure printing, stamp printing, knife coating, cup coating and curtain coating.
If the source material 23 is in the form of dry powder it can be coated on the substrate
using dry powder coating methods such as spraying, including electrostatic spraying.
For electrostatic deposition methods dry powder particles may have to be first coated
with a dielectric layer to be able to electrically charge them. The precursor film
25 should have a thickness of greater than or equal to 0.5µm and less than or equal
to 20 µm, and the preferred thickness range is greater than or equal to 1.0
µm and less than or equal to 10
µm.
[0049] As indicated, assuming the separate Group IB 32 and Group IIIA 33 particles are present,
at least 50 molar % of the Group IB elements and at least 50 molar % of the Group
IIIA elements of the source material 23 are contained in one or more Group IB-IIIA
alloys in the small (e.g., smaller than or equal to 2µm) Group IB IIIA alloy-containing
particles, which are distributed throughout the source material 23. This facilitates
the control and uniformity of distribution of the I/III ratio in the final compound
film 27 irrespective of the size of the substrate or the thickness uniformity of the
precursor film 25 or compound film 27. Generally, even higher molar percentages, such
as at least 60% in each case, at least 90% in each case, or 100% is advantageous,
purely from the perspective of controlling this ratio and its uniformity of distribution.
Of course, this may involve the complete absence of the separate Group IB and Group
IIIA particles.
[0050] Still referring to Fig. 2, after its deposition, the precursor film 25 is subjected
to the post-deposition treatment step 26 to form the Group IB-IIIA-VIA compound film
27. The post-deposition treatment step 26 includes heat treatment, which may be in
the form of furnace annealing at atmospheric pressure, annealing in vacuum, rapid
thermal annealing or laser annealing. The atmosphere during the annealing step can
be inert, such as vacuum, argon (Ar), helium (He) or nitrogen (N) (e.g., as N
2), it may include reducing gas such as hydrogen (H) (e.g., as H
2), and it may contain Group VIA elements such as Se, S and Te. The exact nature of
the annealing atmosphere of the post-deposition treatment step 26 depends on the nature
of the source material 23. For example, if the source material 23 contains an adequate
amount of the Group VIA elements, the annealing atmosphere used can be inert or reducing.
If, on the other hand, the source material 23 does not contain any Group VIA element
or it does not contain an adequate amount, then the annealing atmosphere should contain
the desired Group VIA elements to be able to form the good quality Group IB-IIIA-VIA
compound film 27.
[0051] In the case of selenide growth, the annealing atmosphere may contain H
2Se, (CH
3)
2Se, (C
2H
5)
2Se or Se vapor. In the case of sulfide growth, H
2S, CS
2 or S vapors can be used. For sulfo-selenide layers, a mixture of S and Se containing
species in the annealing atmosphere can be used, or one type of the Group VIA element
such as Se, may be included in the precursor film 25, and the other one, such as S,
can be supplied from the annealing atmosphere during the post-deposition treatment
step 26. The temperature of annealing can be in the range of 350 °C to 700 °C, with
the range of 400 °C to 600 °C typically preferred. The duration of annealing depends
on the temperature of annealing, and it may vary from about 5 minutes to about 3 hours,
with about 15 minutes to about 1 hour typically preferred, when the furnace annealing
is employed.
[0052] In one preferred embodiment of the present invention the I/III molar ratio of the
source material 23 is greater than or equal to 0.80 and less than or equal to 1.0,
and this ratio is substantially carried to the precursor film 25 in a uniform manner.
Referring to Fig. 2, in this case, the I/III molar ratio of the Group IB-IIIA-VIA
compound film 27 is very close to the I/III ratio of the source material 23. Alternatively,
a source material 23 with a I/III ratio of higher than 1.0 and up to about 1.2 can
be prepared, for example using Cu
11In
9 , and a precursor film 25 with the same ratio can be deposited. During the post-deposition
treatment step 26, additional Group IIIA materials can be added to the compound film
27, bringing its overall I/III ratio to the desired range less than or equal to 1.0
(while greater than or equal to 0.80). Such an approach is practical if the precursor
film 25 layer contains at least about 80% of the Group IB elements, and at least about
80% of the Group IIIA elements required for the formation of the Group IB-IIIA-VIA
compound film 27. Otherwise, very uniform delivery of the additional Group IIIA elements
onto the precursor film 25 would be required.
Example 1
[0053] A first example of the present invention used a Cu-In alloy starting material 20
powder obtained by the melt atomization technique. The starting material 20 was obtained
by mixing and melting 33.25 weight percent of pure Cu, and 66.75 weight percent of
pure In, under a hydrogen curtain at above 900 °C. This Cu/In ratio of the melt corresponded
to a molar ratio of 0.9. The melted alloy was transformed into powder form in a gas
atomizer employing Ar gas. Quenched powder fell into distilled water on the bottom
of the reactor for further cooling. The powder starting material 20 was sieved, using
-625 mesh screen. A particle size analysis, by conventional optical scattering evaluation,
showed that, after sieving, the powder substantially consisted of particles with sizes
ranging from 1.3 µm to 20 µm with less that 0.3% greater than 20 µm. X-ray diffraction
analysis indicated presence of Cu-In alloy phases such as Cu
2In, Cu
16In
9, and possibly Cu
11In
9 . In addition to the alloy phases, there was a distinct phase of In in this starting
material 20. The starting material 20 of this example had no Group IB element particles
32, no Group IIIA element particles 33 and no Group VIA element particles 34. The
starting material 20 only contained the Group IB-IIIA alloy-containing particles 31
which, in addition to the Group IB-IIIA alloys, contained elemental phase of In. The
selected Cu/In ratio was 0.9. Specifically this molar ratio based on the initial weight
percentages can generally be assumed to be carried through into the powder which is
in the ink. The analogous assumption typically applies where this ratio, for example,
is greater than about 0.80 and less than about 1.0, and is applied in these examples.
[0054] The source material 23 was then made by using the following pre-deposition treatments.
9.76 grams of the sieved powder was mixed with 22.62 grams of water. To the mixture,
0.14 grams of wetting agent (W-22 - manufactured by Daniel Products of New Jersey)
and 0.39 grams of dispersant (D-3019 manufactured by Rohm & Haas of Pennsylvania )
was added. The mixture was milled in a ball mill for 42 hours. The resulting source
material 23 was in the form of a water-thin ink.
[0055] For test purposes, a precursor film of this ink (thus, having no Group VIA present)
was coated by the cup-coating technique on a conventional piece of off-the-shelf soda-lime
glass. Such glass typically contains about 15 to 17 percent sodium oxide (by weight).
The cup used had an opening with a depth of 150 µm (6 mils), and the resulting layer,
after drying on a hot plate at 60 °C, was about 20 µm thick. X-ray diffraction analysis,
presented in Fig. 5, shows the X-ray diffraction spectra which indicate the presence
of CuIn
2 phase, marked with asterisks, and Cu
11In
9 phase, marked with dots. Particle size analysis, by conventional optical scattering
evaluation, made on the ink showed the largest particle size (largest dimension across)
to be about 2.0 µm, and a mean particle size of about 0.5
µm.
[0056] The above results demonstrated efficient particle milling even with the presence
of a soft material such as In. The approach described, as demonstrated in this example,
chemically ties much of the Group IIIA element (In) of the formulation to the Group
IB element (Cu), in the form of a Cu-In alloy. Any excess In is dispersed microscopically
throughout the small particles. The particles that contain the Cu-In alloy phases
and microscopically distributed In phase can be efficiently milled, as demonstrated
in this example. This is probably due to the fact that Cu-In alloys are much more
brittle than In. The X-ray diffraction data also indicate that during the milling
process the microscopically distributed In further reacts with the Cu-In phases, and
forms an In-rich alloy phase which was determined to be CuIn
2. No appreciable amount of In
2O
3 phase in the milled powder was observed, despite the fact that the milling was done
in water. This may be due to the fact that most of the In in this invention is chemically
tied in Cu-In alloys, and oxidation of In in the alloy is not favored as much as oxidation
of pure In element.
[0057] Once the species in the above-described precursor film was identified by the X-ray
diffraction results of Fig.5, a thinner film was coated by the cup-coating method
on a two-layer substrate made of a glass sub-layer and Mo coating layer (such as is
shown at 10 and 11 and in Fig. 3) using the same ink described above. This method
also uses a conventional piece of off-the-shelf soda-lime glass as the sub-layer.
As a result, the precursor film 25 was about 4 µm thick and it was put into a selenization
reactor and annealed at about 450 °C in a 5% H
2Se and 95% N
2 gas mixture for 15 minutes. After cooling down, the compound film obtained by this
method was taken out of the reactor and X-ray diffraction analysis was done. Obtained
diffraction data are illustrated in Fig. 6. All the peaks of Fig. 6 are associated
with copper-indium-diselenide CuInSe
2, except the two associated with the Mo-coating of the substrate, which are labeled
Mo. This demonstrated the ability of the present invention to yield the Group IB-IIIA-VIA
compound. In addition, the substrates made of soda-lime glass with Na provide Na,
which acts as a naturally-provided dopant for CuInSe
2, and as a result, assuming doping is desired, no additional doping is needed. The
idea of doping assumes the presence of only a small percentage of dopant in the doped
material, typically each dopant added being less than about 1 molar % of the atoms
for which they may be substitutes in a material or formulation. In reality, only a
small fraction of this 1 molar % usually becomes electronically active as a dopant
in the material - typically less than about 1% of this 1%. Thus, for example, if a
dopant is present in the starting material or source material, as part of a Group
IB/IIIA alloy phase, that phase is viewed as a doped Group IB-IIIA alloy phase, with
the dopant a small percentage constituent.
Example 2
[0058] In another example, the starting material 20 powder of the first example was used
in a mixture of 9.78 grams of the sieved powder with 22.4 grams of water, 0.14 grams
of W-22, 0.39 grams of D-3019 and 0.1 gram of Se powder. The mixture was milled in
a ball mill for 42 hours. The resulting source material 23 was in the form of a water-thin
ink. The precursor film 25 obtained by this method was deposited by the same cup-coating
technique as in the first example on the same form of the two-layer glass/Mo substrate
using the ink source material 23. The resulting precursor film 25 was about 4 µm thick.
The resulting precursor film 25 was put in a selenization reactor and annealed at
about 450 °C in a 5% H
2Se and 95% N
2 gas mixture for 15 minutes. X-ray diffraction data of the resulting layer identified
the compound film 27 as CuInSe
2. This example was repeated by increasing the Se amount to 3.04 grams, reducing the
water to 22 grams and reducing the starting material powder to 6.61 grams. Formation
of CuInSe
2 was confirmed by X-ray diffraction data. However, this film was more porous compared
to the one prepared with only 0.1 grams of Se.
Example 3
[0059] In a third example, the melt atomization technique of the first example was used
to obtain another starting material 20 powder, followed by a sieving step, with a
different composition of 50.78 weight percent of In, 36 weight percent of Cu and 13.22
weight percent of Ga. This composition corresponds to the molar ratios of Cu/(In+Ga)=0.9
and Ga/(Ga+In)=0.3. Here, the Group IB element was Cu and the Group IIIA was an alloy
or mixture of In and Ga that can be represented by the chemical formula In
x Ga
(1-x) with 0<x<1. In this example, 11.03 grams of the resulting starting material 20 powder
was milled in a ball mill in a mixture with 25.03 grams of water along with 0.16 grams
of W-22, 0.44 grams of D-3019 and 0.11 grams of Se powder for 42 hours. The ink source
material 23 obtained as a result of the milling process had some agglomerated particles,
which were broken down by a mortar and pestle. The ink was painted on a soda-lime
glass substrate (using the same off-the-shelf soda-lime glass material containing
Na as in the first example), using a brush. The selenization step of Example 1 was
carried out on the resulting layer. X-ray diffraction data showed the peaks associated
with CuInSe
2 and CuIn
0.7Ga
0.3Se
2 phases.
Example 4
[0060] In yet another example, a piece of the CuInSe
2 film formed on a glass/Mo substrate in accordance with the first example was used
for fabrication of a CuInSe
2/CdZnS solar cell device, using standard procedures known in the art. A thin layer
of CdZnS was deposited on the CuInSe
2 by a commonly used chemical bath deposition technique. The deposition bath consisted
of 5ml of 0.5 molar zinc acetate, 10 ml of 1.0 molar cadmium acetate, 7 ml of triethanolamine,
4.5 ml of ammonium hydroxide and 55 ml of distilled water. The solution was heated
to 55°C and the sample was placed in a beaker containing the solution. Twelve ml of
1.0 molar thiorea was added into the beaker, initiating the CdZnS deposition which
lasted 10 minutes. Since the CuInSe
2 film was dipped in the bath, this deposition resulted in an extra layer of CdZnS
deposited at the back of the CuInSe
2 film, which was removed using a cotton swab dipped in HCl. The CdZnS deposition was
followed by the deposition of a - transparent ZnO layer by the commonly used metal
organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) technique, employing diethyl zinc as the
zinc source, and water vapor as the oxygen source. The sheet resistance of the ZnO
layer was about 10 ohms per square. Solar cells of 0.09 cm
2 were isolated and characterized. Fig.7 shows the current versus potential (I-V) characteristics
of a typical device made by this method, having a conversion efficiency of about 7%.
This result demonstrates that the method has the capacity to yield material with electronic
properties suitable for the fabrication of active electronic devices.
Example 5
[0061] In still another example, the melt atomization technique was used to obtain another
starting material 20 powder with a Cu/In molar ratio of 0.87, and the powder was sieved
as in Example 1. An ink source material 23 with the same Cu/In ratio was obtained
after milling using this sieved powder, as described in the first example. This source
material 23 was coated on a Mo-coated glass substrate (using the same off-the-shelf
soda-lime glass material containing Na as in the first example), employing the same
cup coating technique. The selenization step, as described in Example 1, was carried
out and solar devices were fabricated as described above in Example 4. Fig. 8 shows
the I-V characteristics of the obtained typical solar cell, with a conversion efficiency
of 9.42%.
Example 6
[0062] To demonstrate the doping of the compound films externally rather than through diffusion
from the Na-containing glass, the following experiment was carried out.
[0063] The ink of Example 5 was coated on a glass/Mo substrate. This time the selected glass
was Corning 7059 glass that contains no Na. By selecting a Na-free glass substrate,
it was assured that any doping effect that may be observed would not be due to Na
diffusing into the compound layer from the glass through the Mo contact layer.
[0064] Also, a six ml portion of the ink of Example 5 was put into a small tube and 42 mg
of sodium acetate was dissolved in this ink. The doped ink was then coated on a glass/Mo
substrate using the Corning 7059 glass.
[0065] The doped and undoped precursor layers were selenized as in Example 1. Devices were
fabricated on both films as in Example 4. The results are shown in the two I-V curves
shown in Fig. 9. The curve "A" device, made with the undoped compound film, is very
poor with a conversion efficiency of less than 0.5%. This is due to the very high
resistivity of the CuInSe
2 layer. The curve "B" device, made with the doped compound film, has drastically improved
efficiency of 4.5% demonstrating the effectiveness of the extrinsic Na doping. Similar
positive results apply using other Na dopant sources, such as sodium sulfate and sodium
sulfide.
[0066] The basic method described certainly would be expected to be practical and provide
significant positive results with a molar percent ratio of the Group IB element or
elements to the Group IIIB element or elements in the compound film of greater than
or equal to 0.5 and less than or equal to 1.0. As this ratio increases, the results
should correspondingly improve, with greater than or equal to 0.80 and less than or
equal to 1.0 typically more desirable. The use of doping, to some extent, can compensate
for a lower-end ratio. Thus a I/III ratio, for example of 0.6 with doping, would be
expected to provide results comparable to a significantly higher ratio with no doping.
Also, as indicated already, a starting or intermediate ratio of greater than 1.0,
but reduced to less than 1.0 by the end of, e.g., the annealing step may be provided,
with a starting ratio up to 1.2 expected to be practical and provide significant positive
results.
[0067] The methods described have a range of applicability, e.g., from solar cells for large-scale
power generation, to components for miniature devices, such as medical sensors. Manufacturing
large devices, at least 0,093 m
2 (one square foot) and preferably 0,37 m
2-0,74 m
2 (four to eight square feet), would, based on the results, yield efficiencies as high
as about 10% and at least 7%. Ultimately, efficiencies of 15% in large modules would
be unsurprising.
[0068] For purposes of simplicity, the description has primarily focused on CuInSe
2 -based structures and compound films of the Group IB-IIIA-VIA type. However, it should
be understood that the compound films of the Group IIB-IVA-VA-type and of the Group
IB-VA-VIA-type may be substituted. The preferred elements from these groups are Cu
from the Group IB, Ga and In from the Group IIIA, S,Se and Te from the Group VIA,
Zn and Cd from the Group IIB, silicon (Si), germanium (Ge) and tin (Sn) from the Group
IVA and P, arsenic (As), and Sb from the Group VA. The dopants preferred for the Group
IB-IIIA-VIA materials are from Group IA, like Li, Na and K, and from Group VA like
P, As, Sb and Bi, the dopant should be less than or equal to about 1 molar % of the
material for which it substitutes as such a dopant.
1. A method for forming a chemical compound film, comprising the steps of
(a) supplying a starting material including particles of material having Group IB
elements and Group IIIA elements,
(b) preparing a source material from the starting material,
(c) depositing said source material on a base in the form of a precursor film, and
(d) heating said precursor film in a suitable atmosphere to form a film including
a Group IB-IIIA-VIA chemical compound,
characterized in that,
said particles of material have at least one Group IB-IIIA alloy phase, Group IB-IIIA
alloys constituting greater than 50 molar percent of the Group IB elements and greater
than 50 molar percent of the Group IIIA elements, in said source material.
2. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
the ratio by number of moles of Group IB to Group IIIA elements in said source material
is greater than 0.80 and less than 1.0.
3. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
the ratio by number of moles of Group IB to Group IIIA elements in said source material
is greater than 1.
4. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 3 wherein:
the ratio by number of moles of Group IB to Group IIIA elements in said compound film
is greater than 0.80 and less than 1.0.
5. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
Group IB-IIIA alloys constitute greater than 60 molar percent of the Group IB elements
and greater than 60 molar percent of the Group IIIA elements in said source material.
6. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
Group IB-IIIA alloys constitute greater than 90 molar percent of the Group IB elements
and greater than 90 molar percent of the Group IIIA elements in said source material.
7. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
said Group IB-IIIA alloy-containing particles have at least one Group IB or Group
IIIA element phase.
8. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
said source material further includes particles having a Group IB element phase.
9. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
said source material further includes particles having a Group IIIA element phase.
10. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
said source material further includes Group VIA-containing particles.
11. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
the step of supplying a starting material includes forming a powder including said
Group IB-IIIA alloy-containing particles.
12. A method of forming a compound film as defined in claim 11 wherein:
said powder has particle sizes of less than 20 micrometers,
13. A method of forming a compound film as defined in claim 11 wherein:
said powder has particle sizes of less than 2 micrometers.
14. A method of forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
said precursor film has a single layer.
15. A method of forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
said compound film has a thickness of greater than 0.5 micrometer and less than 20
micrometers.
16. A method of forming a compound film as defined in claim 15 wherein:
said compound film has a thickness of greater than 1 micrometer and less than 10 micrometers.
17. A method of forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
the step of supplying a starting material comprises providing a powder including Group
IB-IIIA alloy-containing particles; and
the step of preparing a source material comprises forming an ink including Group IB-IIIA
alloy-containing particles from the starting material.
18. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
said Group IB-IIIA alloy-containing particles contain Cu from Group IB and Group IIIA
material selected from In or Ga.
19. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 18 wherein:
said Group IB-IIIA alloy-containing particles contain Group IIIA material including
an alloy of In and Ga represented by the chemical formula InxGa(1-x) wherein x is greater than 0 and less than 1.
20. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
Group IB-IIIA alloy-containing particles are dispersed throughout the source material.
21. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
said alloy phase includes a dopant.
22. A method for forming a compound film s defined in claim 21 wherein:
said dopant is an element selected from the group of Na, K and Li.
23. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein:
said source material includes a dopant
24. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 1 wherein :
said compound film includes a dopant.
25. A method according to claim 1 for fabricating an electronic device.
26. A method as defined in claim 25 wherein:
the step of supplying a starting material comprises: providing a powder including
Group IB-IIIA alloy-containing particles; and
the step of preparing a source material comprises forming an ink including Group IB-IIIA
alloy-containing particles from the starting material.
27. A method according to claim 1 for fabricating a solar cell.
28. A method as defined in claim 27 wherein:
the step of supplying a starting material comprises providing a powder including Group
IB-IIIA alloy-containing particles; and
the step of preparing a source material comprises forming an ink including Group IB-IIIA
alloy-containing particles from the starting material.
29. A method for forming a chemical compound, comprising the steps of
(a) supplying a starting material including particles of material having elements
selected from Group IIB and IVA elements, and Group IB and VA elements,
(b) preparing a source material from the starting material,
(c) depositing said source material on a base in the form of a precursor film, and
(d) heating said precursor film in a suitable atmosphere to form a film including
a chemical compound selected from a Group IIB-IVA-VA compound for said selected Group
IIB and IVA elements, and a Group IB-VA-VIA compound for said selected Group IB and
VA elements,
characterized in that,
for said first selected elements, said particles of material have at least one Group
IIB-IVA alloy phase, Group IIB-IVA alloys constituting greater than 50 molar percent
of Group IIB elements and greater than 50 molar percent of the Group IVA elements,
in said source material;
for said second selected elements, said particles of material have at least one Group
IB-VA alloy phase, Group IB-VA alloys constituting greater than 50 molar percent of
the Group IB elements and greater than 50 molar percent of the Group VA elements,
in said source material.
30. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 29 wherein:
alloys of said selected Group constitute greater than 60 molar percent of the first
elements of said selected Group and greater than 60 molar percent of the second elements
of said selected Group, in said source material.
31. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 29 wherein:
alloys of said selected Group constitute greater than 90 molar percent of the first
elements of said selected Group and greater than 90 molar percent of the second elements
of said selected Group, in said source material.
32. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 29 wherein:
said alloy phase includes a dopant.
33. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 29 wherein:
said source material includes a dopant.
34. A method for forming a compound film as defined in claim 29 wherein:
said compound film includes a dopant.
1. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Films einer chemischen Verbindung, wobei das Verfahren
folgende Schritte besitzt:
(a) Liefern eines Ausgangsmaterials, das Teilchen eines Materials aufweist, das Elemente
der Gruppe IB sowie Elemente der Gruppe IIIA besitzt,
(b) Herstellen eines Ausgangsstoffs aus dem Ausgangsmaterial,
(c) Ablagern des Ausgangsstoffs auf einer Basis in Form eines Präkursorfilms, und
(d) Erhitzen des Präkursorfilms in einer geeigneten Atmosphäre, um einen Film auszubilden,
der eine chemische Verbindung von Elementen der Gruppen IB-IIIA-VIA aufweist,
dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass
die Teilchen des Materials zumindest eine Legierungsphase von Elementen der Gruppen
IB-IIIA besitzen, wobei die Legierungen von Elementen der Gruppen IB-IIIA mehr als
50 Molarprozente von Elementen der Gruppen IB und mehr als 50 Molarprozente von Elementen
der Gruppen IIIA des Ausgangsstoffs bilden.
2. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Film einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei:
das Molzahlverhältnis von Elementen der Gruppe IB zu Elementen der Gruppe IIIA im
Ausgangsstoff größer als 0,80 und kleiner als 1,0 ist.
3. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Film einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei:
das Molzahlverhältnis von Elementen der Gruppe IB -zu Elementen der Gruppe IIIA im
Ausgangsstoff größer als 1 ist.
4. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Film einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 3, wobei:
das Molzahlverhältnis von Elementen der Gruppe IB zu Elementen der Gruppe IIIA im
Film einer chemischen Verbindung größer als 0,80 und kleiner als 1,0 ist.
5. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Film einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei:
Legierungen von Elementen der Gruppen IB-IIIA mehr als 60 Molarprozente von Elementen
der Gruppe IB und mehr als 60 Molarprozente von Elementen der Gruppe IIIA im Ausgangsstoff
bilden.
6. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Film einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei
:
Legierungen von Elementen der Gruppen IB-IIIA mehr als 90 Molarprozente von Elementen
der Gruppe IB und mehr als 90 Molarprozente von Elementen der Gruppe IIIA im Ausgangsstoff
bilden.
7. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Film einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei:
Teilchen, die Legierungen von Elementen der Gruppen IB-IIIA enthalten, zumindest eine
Phase eines Elements der Gruppe IB oder der Gruppe IIIA besitzen.
8. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Film einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei:
der Ausgangsstoff weiters Teilchen aufweist, die eine Phase eines Elements der Gruppe
IB besitzen.
9. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Film einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei:
der Ausgangsstoff weiters Teilchen aufweist, die eine Phase eines Elements der Gruppe
IIIA besitzen.
10. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Film einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei:
der Ausgangsstoff weiters Teilchen aufweist, die Elemente der Gruppe VIA enthalten.
11. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Films einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1,
wobei:
der Schritt, in dem ein Ausgangsmaterial geliefert wird, das Ausbilden eines Pulvers
aufweist, das Teilchen aufweist, die Legierungen von Elementen der Gruppen IB-IIIA
enthalten.
12. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Film einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 11,
wobei:
das Pulver Teilchengrößen unter 20 Mikrometern besitzt.
13. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Film einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 11,
wobei:
das Pulver Teilchengrößen unter 2 Mikrometern besitzt.
14. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Film einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei:
der Präkursorfilm eine einzige Schicht besitzt.
15. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Film einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei:
der Film einer chemischen Verbindung eine Dicke besitzt, die größer als 0,5 Mikrometer
und kleiner als 20 Mikrometer ist.
16. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Films einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 15,
wobei:
der Film einer chemischen Verbindung eine Dicke besitzt, die größer als 1 Mikrometer
und kleiner als 10 Mikrometer ist.
17. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eins Films einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei:
der Schritt, in dem ein Ausgangsmaterial geliefert wird, das Liefern eines Pulvers
enthält, das Teilchen aufweist, die Legierungen von Elementen der Gruppen IB-IIIA
enthalten; und
der Schritt, in dem aus dem Ausgangsmaterial ein Ausgangsstoff hergestellt wird, das
Ausbilden eines Anstrichs enthält, der Teilchen aufweist, die Legierungen
von Elementen der Gruppen IB-IIIA enthalten.
18. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Films einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1,
wobei:
die Teilchen, die Legierungen von Elementen der Gruppen IB-IIIA enthalten, Cu aus
der Gruppe IB sowie ein Material der Gruppe IIIA enthalten, das aus In oder Ga ausgewählt
wird.
19. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Films einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 18,
wobei:
die Teilchen, die Legierungen von Elementen der Gruppen IB-IIIA enthalten, ein Material
der Gruppe IIIA enthalten, das eine Legierung von In und Ga aufweist, die durch die
chemische Formel InxGa(1-x) dargestellt wird, wobei x größer als 0 und kleiner als 1 ist.
20. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Films einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1,
wobei:
Teilchen, die Legierungen von Elementen der Gruppen IB-IIIA enthalten, über den Ausgangsstoff
verteilt sind.
21. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Films einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1,
wobei:
die Legierungsphase eine Dotiersubstanz aufweist.
22. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Films einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 21,
wobei:
die Dotiersubstanz ein Element ist, das aus der Gruppe Na, K und Li ausgewählt wird.
23. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Films einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1,
wobei:
der Ausgangsstoff eine Dotiersubstanz aufweist.
24. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Films einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 1,
wobei:
der Film einer chemischen Verbindung eine Dotiersubstanz aufweist.
25. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 1 für die Herstellung einer elektronischen Einrichtung.
26. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 25, wobei:
der Schritt, in dem ein Ausgangsmaterial geliefert wird, das Liefern eines Pulvers
enthält, das Teilchen aufweist, die Legierungen von Elementen der Gruppen IB-IIIA
enthalten; und
der Schritt, in dem aus dem Ausgangsmaterial ein Ausgangsstoff hergestellt wird, das
Ausbilden eines Anstrichs aufweist, der Teilchen aufweist, die Legierungen von Elementen
der Gruppen IB-IIIA enthalten.
27. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 1 zum Herstellen einer Solarzelle.
28. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 27, wobei:
der Schritt, in dem ein Ausgangsmaterial geliefert wird,
das Liefern eines Pulvers enthält, das Teilchen aufweist, die Legierungen von Elementen
der Gruppen IB-IIIA enthalten; und
der Schritt, in dem aus den Ausgangsmaterialien ein Ausgangsstoff hergestellt wird,
das Ausbilden eines Anstrichs enthält, der Teilchen aufweist, die Legierungen von
Elementen der Gruppen IB-IIIA enthalten.
29. Verfahren zum Ausbilden einer chemischen Verbindung, wobei das Verfahren folgende
Schritte enthält:
(a) Liefern eines Ausgangsmaterials, das Teilchen eines Materials enthält, das Elemente
besitzt, die aus Elementen der Gruppe IIB und IVA und aus Elementen der Gruppe IB
und VA ausgewählt werden, sowie
(b) Herstellen eines Ausgangsstoffs aus dem Ausgangsmaterial,
(c) Ablagern des Ausgangsstoffs auf einer Basis in Form eines Präkursorfilms, und
(d) Erhitzen des Präkursorfilms in einer geeigneten Atmosphäre, um einen. Film auszubilden,
der eine chemische Verbindung aufweist, die aus einer Verbindung von Elementen der
Gruppen IIB-IVA-VA für die ausgewählten Elemente der Gruppe IIB und IVA sowie aus
einer Verbindung von Elementen der Gruppen IB-VA-VIA für die ausgewählten Elemente
der Gruppe IB und VA ausgewählt wird,
dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass
für die ersten ausgewählten Elemente die Teilchen eines Materials zumindest eine Legierungsphase
von Elementen der Gruppen IIB-IVA besitzen, wobei Legierungen von Elementen der Gruppen
IIB-IVA mehr als 50 Molarprozente von Elementen der Gruppe IIB und mehr als 50 Molarprozente
von Elementen der Gruppe IVA im Ausgangsstoff bilden;
für die zweiten ausgewählten Elemente die Teilchen des Materials zumindest eine Legierungsphase
von Elementen der Gruppen IB-VA besitzen, wobei Legierungen von Elementen der Gruppen
IB-VA mehr als 50 Molarprozente von Elementen der Gruppe IB und mehr als 50 Molarprozente
von Elementen der Gruppe VA im Ausgangsstoff bilden.
30. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Films einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 29,
wobei:
Legierungen von Elementen der ausgewählten Gruppe mehr als 60 Molarprozente der ersten
Elemente der ausgewählten Gruppe und mehr als 60 Molarprozente der zweiten Elemente
der ausgewählten der Gruppe im Ausgangsstoff bilden.
31. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Films einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 29,
wobei:
Legierungen von Elementen der ausgewählten Gruppe mehr als 90 Molarprozente der ersten
Elemente der ausgewählten Gruppe und mehr als 90 Molarprozente der zweiten Elemente
der ausgewählten Gruppe im Ausgangsstoff bilden.
32. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Films einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 29,
wobei:
die Legierungsphase eine Dotiersubstanz aufweist.
33. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Films einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 29,
wobei:
der Ausgangsstoff eine Dotiersubstanz aufweist.
34. Verfahren zum Ausbilden eines Films einer chemischen Verbindung gemäß Anspruch 29,
wobei:
der Film einer chemischen Verbindung eine Dotiersubstanz aufweist.
1. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés chimiques, comprenant les étapes
consistant à :
(a) fournir une matière première comprenant des particules de matériau comportant
des éléments du groupe IB et des éléments du groupe IIIA,
(b) préparer un matériau source à partir de la matière première,
(c) déposer ledit matériau source sur une base sous forme d'un film précurseur, et
(d) chauffer ledit film précurseur dans une atmosphère appropriée pour former un film
comprenant un composé chimique de groupe IB-IIIA-VIA,
caractérisé en ce que,
lesdites particules de matériau ont au moins une phase d'alliage groupe IB-IIIA, les
alliages groupe IB-IIIA constituant plus de 50 pour cent en mole des éléments du groupe
IB et plus de 50 pour cent en mole des éléments du groupe IIIA, dans ledit matériau
source.
2. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
le rapport en nombre de moles des éléments du groupe IB sur les éléments du groupe
IIIA dans ledit matériau source est supérieur à 0,80 et inférieur à 1,0.
3. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1 dans lequel
:
le rapport en nombre de moles des éléments du groupe IB sur les éléments du groupe
IIIA dans ledit matériau source est supérieur à 1.
4. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 3, dans lequel
:
le rapport en nombre de moles des éléments du groupe IB sur les éléments du groupe
IIIA dans ladite pellicule de composés est supérieur à 0,80 et inférieur à 1,0.
5. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
les alliages groupe IB-IIIA constituent un taux supérieur à 60 pour cent en mole des
éléments du groupe IB et supérieur à 60 pour cent en mole des éléments du groupe IIIA
dans ledit matériau source.
6. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
les alliages groupe IB-IIIA constituent un taux supérieur à 90 pour cent en mole des
éléments du groupe IB et supérieur à 90 pour cent en mole des éléments du groupe IIIA
dans ledit matériau source.
7. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
lesdites particules contenant l'alliage groupe IB-IIIA possèdent au moins une phase
d'élément de groupe IB ou de groupe IIIA.
8. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
ledit matériau source comprend en outre des particules ayant une phase d'élément de
groupe IB.
9. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
ledit matériau source comprend en outre des particules ayant une phase d'élément de
groupe IIIA.
10. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
ledit matériau source comprend en outre des particules contenant le groupe VIA.
11. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
l'étape consistant à fournir une matière première comprend la formation d'une poudre
comportant lesdites particules contenant l'alliage groupe IB-IIIA.
12. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 11, dans lequel
:
ladite poudre renferme des tailles de particules inférieures à 20 micromètres.
13. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 11, dans lequel
:
ladite poudre renferme des tailles de particules inférieures à 2 micromètres.
14. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
ledit film précurseur comporte une couche unique.
15. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
ladite pellicule de composés a une épaisseur supérieure à 0,5 micromètre et inférieure
à 20 micromètres.
16. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 15, dans lequel
:
ladite pellicule de composés a une épaisseur supérieure à 1 micromètre et inférieure
à 10 micromètres.
17. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
l'étape consistant à fournir une matière première comprend l'apport d'une poudre comportant
des particules contenant l'alliage groupe IB-IIIA, et
l'étape consistant à préparer un matériau source comprend la formation d'une encre
comportant des particules contenant l'alliage groupe IB-IIIA à partir de la matière
première.
18. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
lesdites particules contenant l'alliage groupe IB-IIIA renferment l'élément Cu issu
du groupe IB et un matériau de groupe IIIA choisi à partir de l'élément In ou de l'élément
Ga.
19. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 18, dans lequel
:
lesdites particules contenant l'alliage groupe IB-IIIA contiennent un matériau de
groupe IIIA comprenant un alliage de In et Ga représenté par la formule chimique InxGa(3-x) dans laquelle x est supérieur à 0 et inférieur à 1.
20. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
les particules contenant l'alliage groupe IB-IIIA sont dispersées dans tout le matériau
source.
21. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
ladite phase d'alliage comprend un dopant.
22. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 21, dans lequel
:
ledit dopant est un élément choisi à partir du groupe constitué par Na, K et Li.
23. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
ledit matériau source comprend un dopant.
24. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 1, dans lequel
:
ladite pellicule de composés comprend un dopant.
25. Procédé selon la revendication 1 destiné à fabriquer un dispositif électronique.
26. Procédé selon la revendication 25, dans lequel :
l'étape consistant à fournir une matière première comprend l'apport d'une poudre comportant
des particules contenant l'alliage groupe IB-IIIA, et
l'étape consistant à préparer un matériau source comprend la formation d'une encre
comportant des particules contenant l'alliage de groupe IB-IIIA à partir de la matière
première.
27. Procédé selon la revendication 1 destiné à fabriquer une cellule solaire.
28. Procédé selon la revendication 27 dans lequel :
l'étape consistant à fournir une matière première comprend l'apport d'une poudre comportant
des particules contenant l'alliage groupe IB-IIIA, et
l'étape consistant à préparer un matériau source comprend la formation d'une encre
comportant des particules contenant l'alliage groupe IB-IIIA à partir des matières
premières.
29. Procédé de formation d'un composé chimique, comprenant les étapes consistant à :
(a) fournir une matière première comprenant des particules de matériau ayant des éléments
choisis à partir d'éléments du groupe IIB et du groupe IVA, et d'éléments du groupe
IB et VA,
(b) préparer un matériau source à partir de la matière première,
(c) déposer ledit matériau source sur une base sous forme d'un film précurseur, et
(d) chauffer ledit film précurseur dans une atmosphère appropriée pour former un film
comprenant un composé chimique choisi à partir d'un composé de groupe IIB-IVA-VA pour
lesdits éléments du groupe IIB et du groupe IVA choisis, et un composé de groupe IB-VA-VIA
pour lesdits éléments de groupe IB et du groupe VA choisis,
caractérisé en ce que,
pour lesdits premiers éléments choisis, lesdites particules de matériau ont au moins
une phase d'alliage groupe IIB-IVA, les alliages de groupe IIB-IVA constituant plus
de 50 pour cent en mole des éléments de groupe IIB et plus de 50 pour cent en mole
des éléments de groupe IVA, dans ledit matériau source,
pour lesdits seconds éléments choisis, lesdites particules de matériau ont au moins
une phase d'alliage groupe IB-VA, les alliages de groupe IB-VA constituant plus de
50 pour cent en mole des éléments de groupe IB et plus de 50 pour cent en mole des
éléments de groupe VA, dans ledit matériau source.
30. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 29 dans lequel
:
les alliages dudit groupe choisi constituent plus de 60 pour cent en mole des premiers
éléments dudit groupe choisi et plus de 60 pour cent en mole des seconds éléments
dudit groupe choisi, dans ledit matériau source.
31. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 29, dans lequel
:
les alliages dudit groupe choisi constituent plus de 90 pour cent en mole des premiers
éléments dudit groupe choisi et plus de 90 pour cent en mole des seconds éléments
dudit groupe choisi, dans ledit matériau source.
32. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 29, dans lequel
:
ladite phase d'alliage comprend un dopant.
33. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 29, dans lequel
:
ledit matériau source comprend un dopant.
34. Procédé de formation d'une pellicule de composés selon la revendication 29, dans lequel
:
ladite pellicule de composés comprend un dopant.