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Oct. 7, 2010 12:17 UTC

Research and Markets: Photovoltaic Technology Roadmap: near-Maximum Efficiency Could Be Achieved in Ten Years

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/3293b8/photovoltaic_techn) has announced the addition of the "Photovoltaic Technology Roadmap" report to their offering.

Making photovoltaics a low-cost source of clean and renewable energy is the main goal for most of developed countries. Many of them have agreed on a 20% renewable energy target by 2020, and some already started to implement aggressive feed-in-tariffs to finance this objective. But the question is how do we get there from what has been achieved so far?

 

What would happen if governments partially stop financing the PV industry through incentive program cuts as in Germany for instance? Can todays technologies be competitive without the incentives or do we need technical evolutions, or even technical breakthroughs to get there?

There is no doubt that the government incentive programs helped industrials to achieve, step by step, drastic cost reduction and performance improvements in a very short period of time but without real revolutions. The PV industry has also seen the emergence of large-scale production facilities, international R&D centres, and innovative equipment makers thus resulting in the impressive cost reduction we know. But if large production facilities can play the scale effect card to lower the cost of raw material and increase their yield, many other levers exist in order to reduce the production cost.

This PV Technology roadmap report describes all the different aspects linked to production cost reduction: from cell structure innovations to modification of manufacturing processes. It in fact describes all the existing technologies: From those developed by the University of New South Wales (UNSW), to the metal wrap through (MWT) concept developed by the ECN and industrialized with Solland, to the new emitter wrap through (EWT) technology being developed by Bosh Solar.

Conventional crystalline silicon cells could bump up against their theoretical maximum efficiency of 29% as soon as 2020. Sanyo Electric Co. Ltd., for instance, demonstrated -23% efficiency with a 10cm R&D unit of its heterojunction with intrinsic thin layer (HIT) cells last year.

It follows that thinner surface contacts, better transparent conductors, and lower defect density can improve performance by several more percentage points, to likely get commercial efficiency up to about as close as practical to the theoretical limit within about ten years.

The objectives of this report are:

  • To provide market trends on module price, installations breakdown by technology, production capacity utilization
  • To provide key technical insights about future technology trends and Challenges
  • To provide a deep understanding of new improvements that will occur with the current C-Si cell design: emitter profile optimization, fine line metallization, front and rear surface passivation layer optimization and a better surface structuring.

Who Should Buy?

  • Marketing executives will find key figures and concepts for their strategic plan and product offer.
  • Technical managers and directors will find a complete description on the PV manufacturing processes evolution in order to find new business opportunities either in the wafer-based or thin-film markets.

Key Topics Covered:

  • PV OFFER: MARKET DESCRIPTION AND FORECAST
  • PV DEMAND EVOLUTION
  • PV TECHNOLOGY ROADMAP: STRATEGIES TO REDUCE PRODUCTION COST
  • DEVELOPMENT TRENDS ON C-SI CELLS
  • DEVELOPMENT TRENDS IN THIN FILM SOLAR CELLS
  • SPECIFIC PROCESSES/POTENTIAL GAME CHANGERS

Companies Mentioned:

- Abound Solar

- Advent Solar

- AMAT

- Antec Solar

- Canon Anelva

- ECN

- Energo Solar

- EPV

- First Solar

- GET

- Heliosphera

- IMEC

- Kalixo

- Kaneka

- Kyocera

- Mitsubishi

- Nanogram

- NREL

- Oerlikon

- Optomec

- Philips Miplaza

- Photovoltech

- Schmid

- Schott

- Semitool- Sharpr

- Synova

- Ulvac

- UniSolar

For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/3293b8/photovoltaic_techn

Contacts

Research and Markets
Laura Wood, Senior Manager,
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
U.S. Fax: 646-607-1907
Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716


Source: Research and Markets

 

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