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September
29, 2008
Washington,
DC, USA: DOE to Provide Up to $17.6 Million for Solar Photovoltaic
Technology Development
The
U.S. Department of Energy today announced up to $17.6 million,
subject to annual appropriations, for six early stage photovoltaic
module incubator projects that focus on the initial manufacturing
of advanced solar PV technologies. Including the cost share from
industry, which will be at least 20 percent, the total research
investment is expected to reach up to $35.4 million.
These
projects support President Bush’s Solar America Initiative, which
aims to make solar energy cost-competitive with conventional forms
of electricity by 2015. Increasing the use of alternative and
clean energy technologies such as solar energy is critical to
diversifying the Nation’s energy sources to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions and dependence on foreign oil.
As
the lead agency for President Bush’s Advanced Energy Initiative,
DOE is committed to the diversification of our energy resources
by spurring widespread commercialization and deployment of clean
solar energy technologies. The development of innovative technologies
will help to provide long-term economic, environmental, and security
benefits to the United States.
“These
projects will help promote the development of a diverse set of
photovoltaic technologies and ensure that the U.S. is a world
leader in next-generation, cost-effective solar technologies,”
Acting Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy John Mizroch said. “These solar photovoltaic incubator
awards will help accelerate the time it takes for innovative start-up
companies to get their technologies to market.”
Through
these projects, companies will seek to accelerate the time it
takes to move innovative PV technologies from laboratory demonstration
into pilot production, and to reduce the cost, improve performance
and expand the manufacturing capacity of PV modules. These awards
will help fill the commercialization pipeline with advanced solar
technologies and bring a new generation of PV product suppliers
into the marketplace. The announcement of this funding opportunity
was made March 3, 2008.
Upon
negotiation of their subcontracts through DOE’s National Renewable
Energy Laboratory (NREL), the following six companies will begin
their 18-month projects:
1366
Technologies (Lexington, Mass.) is developing a new cell architecture
and related processes for low-cost multi-crystalline silicon cells.
This project is expected to enhance cell performance by light-trapping
texturing and grooves for self-aligned metallization fingers.
By improving the light trapping and charge carrier movement within
the cell, this project will significantly increase the efficiency
of multicrystalline cells. By the end of the project, 1366 Technologies
plans to deliver a 19 percent efficient, 15.6x15.6 cm2, multi-crystalline
silicon cell with a technology that is applicable across the crystalline
silicon cell industry. (Up to $3 million)
Innovalight
(Sunnyvale, Calif.) is developing very high-efficiency, low-cost
solar cells and modules by ink-jet printing their proprietary
“silicon ink” onto thin-crystalline silicon wafers. The company’s
contact-less printing process has been demonstrated to significantly
reduce both the manufacturing costs and the complexity required
to make today’s highly-efficient cells and modules. (Up to $3
million)
Skyline
Solar (Mountain View, Calif.) has developed an integrated
lightweight, single-axis tracked system that has been demonstrated
to reflect and concentrate sunlight over 10X onto silicon cells.
The use of mirrors to concentrate light will reduce the use of
the greatest cost driver for traditional silicon modules, the
solar cells, by over 90%. Additionally, the design leverages the
mainstream PV industrial base and amplifies its capacity through
significant concentration to enable rapid scaling. It seeks to
dramatically lower the cost to manufacture modules and install
complete systems to achieve a levelized cost of energy below grid
parity. By the end of this project, Skyline plans to deliver modules
that exceed 12m2 area and 15 percent aperture-area efficiency.
(Up to $3 million)
Solasta
(Newton, Mass.) is using a novel cell design based on an amorphous-silicon
“nanocoax” structure, which increases current and lowers materials
cost by shortening the path charge carriers must travel to the
cell’s conducting wires. This approach effectively decouples the
optical and electronic pathways. If successful, Solasta will deliver
15 percent efficient, 100-cm2 pre-production cells at the end
of the project. (Up to $2.6 million)
Solexel
(Milpitas, Calif.) plans to commercialize a disruptive, 3D,
high efficiency mono-crystalline silicon cell technology, while
dramatically reducing manufacturing cost per watt. Through a series
of novel yet low cost processing steps, this project will manufacture
a solar cell architecture which efficiently traps light using
minimal material. At the end of this project, Solexel plans to
deliver a 17-19 percent efficient, 156x156 mm2, single-crystal
cell that consumes substantially lower silicon per watt than conventionally
sliced wafers. Solexel aspires to be a gigawatt-scale PV producer
within five years. (Up to $3 million)
Spire
Semiconductor (Hudson, N.H.) plans on opening up the design
space for three-junction tandem solar cells by growing differentiated
bi-facial cells on a Gallium Arsenide substrate. This approach
will allow spire to better optimize the optical properties of
their device layers to better match the solar spectrum. Spire
Semiconductor is targeting cell efficiencies over 42 percent using
a low-cost manufacturing method. (Up to $2.97 million)
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