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German Solar-cell maker EverQ GmbH opens solar-cell plant in Thalheim, Germany

October 18th, 2006 by kalyan89 in SC Company Reports

German Solar-cell maker EverQ GmbH opens solar-cell plant in Thalheim, Germany

Mark LaPedus, EE Times / June 21, 2006
Source:  http://www.eetimes.eu/power/189600197

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Solar-cell maker EverQ GmbH Tuesday (June 20) marked the official opening of its first and previously-announced production facility in Thalheim, Germany.

EverQ (Thalheim) is a partnership of Evergreen Solar Inc., Q-Cells AG and Renewable Energy Corp. ASA.

Evergreen Solar develops, manufactures and markets solar cells. Q-Cells claims to be the world’s largest independent manufacturer of crystalline silicon solar cells. Renewable Energy is the world’s largest manufacturer of solar-grade silicon and multicrystalline wafers.

To date, 260 workers are employed at the 16,400-square-meter production facility at EverQ. The number of employees is expected to increase to more than 300 when the full production capacity of 30-megawatts is achieved.

EverQ uses Evergreen Solar’s thin-film solar technology, dubbed String Ribbon. The technology claims to require nearly 50 percent less silicon than conventional crystalline technologies. EverQ exclusively manufactures Evergreen’s Spruce Line of photovoltaic (PV) panels.

EverQ is already planning a major expansion in Thalheim as part of a recently-announced effort. Groundbreaking for a second wafer, cell and module manufacturing plant — with a capacity of 50-MW — is expected later this year.

With REC committing to supply a total of 7,400 metric tons of silicon over seven years beginning in 2008, EverQ plans to increase its current production capacity from 30-MW to approximately 300-MW by 2010 or sooner.

German Solar firm Q-Cell agrees on $150 million US deal

October 18th, 2006 by kalyan89 in SC Company Reports

LONDON — Q-Cells AG, a maker of crystalline silicon solar cells, has signed a five-year supply deal with PowerLight Corp. valued at $150 million.

Source: EETimes
http://www.eetimes.com/news/semi/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=193301556

Q-Cells (Thalheim, Germany) has agreed to provide PowerLight (Berkeley, Calif.) with $150 million worth of solar cells and granted PowerLight an option to increase that volume by an additional $60 million.

The move helps Q-Cells expand its presence in the U.S. market.

Founded in 1999, Q-Cells employs 900 people and expects to produce polycrystalline and monocrystalline silicon cells with a total output of 255 MWp in 2006 and is in the process of increasing production capacity.

“This deal will showcase the tremendous results that will come from combining PowerLights proven approach to design, development and deployment of solar power systems with Q-Cells’ high-performance photovoltaic technology,” said Anton Milner, chief executive officer and founder of Q-Cells, in a statement issued by PowerLight.
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Earlier (July 2006) news report

Q-Cells invests $9 million in Flexcell, a swiss flexible startup company

EE Times Europe 3 July 2006

http://www.eetimes.eu/germany/190200061

LONDON — Solar energy products supplier Q-Cells AG, which is claimed to be the second biggest manufacturer of mono- and polycrystalline silicon solar cells in the world, has agreed to invest €7 million (about $9.0 million) in Swiss company VHF Technologies SA, which trades as Flexcell.

Flexcell (Yverdon-les-Bains, Switzerland) said it wants to use the money to industrialize a new photovoltaic technology. Q-Cells AG (Thalheim, Germany), with an annual production capacity of 280-Megawatts, has invested in Flexcell as an opportunity in the field of flexible thin-film technologies.

Q-Cells’ investment in Flexcell is earmarked to build an industrial production line in Yverdon with an annual production capacity of 2-megawatts. The increase in the production capacity will enable the company to respond to requests for photovoltaic building components.

Kyocera Achieves New World Record in Solar Cell Efficiency

October 18th, 2006 by kalyan89 in R&D reports, SC Company Reports

Kyocera Achieves New World Record in Solar Cell Efficiency

Oct 16,2006

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Kyocera announced today that it has achieved a new world record of 18.5% energy conversion efficiency for a 15cm x 15cm multicrystalline silicon solar cell.

The achievement represents the latest in a series of advances by Kyocera, which in 1985 became the first manufacturer to commercialize multicrystalline silicon solar cell technology. Prior records for energy conversion efficiency in multicrystalline cells of this size were also set by Kyocera, including 14.5% in 1989, 17.1% in 1996, and 17.7% in 2004.

Kyocera’s other recent efficiency benchmarks were achieved both by optimizing the cell’s grid-line configuration and by texturing the cell’s surface using the company’s proprietary “d.Blue” process, which maximizes sunlight collection by reducing reflectivity. The latest improvement is the result of increasing the amount of light intercepted by the cell by moving the front contacts to the back of the cell.

“The new world record in energy conversion efficiency that Kyocera announces today demonstrates our commitment to continuous improvement,” said Steve Hill, President of Kyocera Solar, Inc. “We are pleased that our team has achieved this milestone and we look forward to putting this technological achievement into mass production.”

Kyocera unveiled the new cell during the Renewable Energy 2006 International Exhibition held in Makuhari, Japan, from October 10 to October 13, 2006. “It was a huge hit at our booth,” said Tom Dyer, Vice President of Marketing and Government Affairs for Kyocera Solar, Inc.

Economist: Solar energy Powering up

October 16th, 2006 by kalyan89 in R&D reports

Solar energy Powering up : Improved devices may make better use of sunlight

Sep 14th 2006

From The Economist print edition
http://www.economist.com/science/displaystory.cfm?story_id=7905292

MOST of the power generated by mankind originates from the sun. It was sunlight that nurtured the early life that became today’s oil, gas and coal. It is the solar heating of the Earth’s atmosphere and oceans that fuels wave power, wind farms and hydroelectric schemes. But using the sun’s energy directly to generate power is rare. Solar cells account for less than 1% of the world’s electricity production.

Recent technological improvements, however, may boost this figure. The root of the problem is that most commercial solar cells are made from silicon, and silicon is expensive. Cells can be made from other, cheaper materials, but these are not as efficient as those made from silicon.

The disparity is stark. Commercial silicon cells have efficiencies of 15% to 20%. In the laboratory, some have been made with an efficiency of 30%. The figure for non-traditional cells is far lower. A typical cell based on electrically conductive plastic has an efficiency of just 3% or 4%. What is needed is a way to boost the efficiency of cells made from cheap materials, and three new ways of doing so were unveiled this week in San Francisco, at the annual meeting of the American Chemical Society.

Solar cells work by the action of light on electrons. An electron held in a chemical bond in the cell absorbs a photon (a particle of light) and, thus energised, breaks free. Such electrons can move about and, if they all move in the same direction, create an electric current. But they will not all travel in the same direction without a little persuasion. With silicon, this is achieved using a secondary electrical field across the cell. Non-silicon cells usually have a built-in “electrochemical potential” that encourages the electrons to move away from areas where they are concentrated and towards places where they have more breathing space.

Kwanghee Lee of Pusan National University, in South Korea, and Alan Heeger of the University of California, Santa Barbara, work on solar cells made of electrically conductive plastics. (Indeed, Dr Heeger won a Nobel prize for discovering that some plastics can be made to conduct electricity.) They found that by adding titanium oxide to such a cell and then baking it in an oven, they could increase the efficiency with which it converted solar energy into electricity.

The trick is to put the titanium oxide in as a layer between the part of the cell where the electrons are liberated and the part where they are collected for dispatch into the wider world. This makes the electrically conductive plastic more sensitive to light at wavelengths where sunlight is more intense. Pop the resulting sandwich in the oven for a few minutes at 150°C and the plastic layer becomes crystalline. This improves the efficiency of the process, because the electrons find it easier to move through crystalline structures.

The technique used by Dr Lee and Dr Heeger boosts the efficiency of plastic cells to 5.6%. That is still poor compared with silicon, but it is a big improvement on what was previously possible. Dr Lee concedes that there is still a long way to go, but says that even an efficiency of 7% would bring plastic cells into competition with their silicon cousins, given how cheap they are to manufacture.

A second approach, taken by Michael Grätzel of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, is to copy nature. Plants absorb solar energy during photosynthesis. They use it to split water into hydrogen ions, electrons and oxygen. The electrons released by this reaction are taken up by carrier molecules and then passed along a chain of such molecules before being used to power the chemical reactions that ultimately make sugar.

Dye-sensitised solar cells seek to mimic this assembly line. The dye acts like chlorophyll, the pigment that makes plants green and that is responsible for absorbing sunlight and liberating electrons. The electrons are passed via a semiconductor to an electrode, through which they leave the cell. By using a dye called phthalocyanine, which absorbs not only visible light but also infra-red wavelengths, Dr Grätzel has been able to raise the efficiency of the process to 11%. That, he says, should be enough to make dye-sensitised cells competitive with silicon.

The third technique, being developed by Prashant Kamat of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana, and his colleagues, uses that fashionable scientific tool, the carbon nanotube. This is a cylinder composed solely of carbon atoms, and one of its properties is good electrical conductivity. In effect, nanotubes act as wires a few billionths of a metre in diameter.

Dr Kamat and his team covered the surface of an experimental cell made of cadmium sulphide, zinc oxide and titanium dioxide with nanotubes, so that the tubes stuck up from the surface like hairs. The tubes then eased the passage of the liberated electrons from the cell to the electrode that collected them. Using this technique doubled the efficiency of Dr Kamat’s cell from 5% to 10% at ultraviolet wavelengths and he reckons it would create similar increases in efficiency in both plastic and dye-based cells.

Such a boost would take novel solar cells closer to becoming a commercial reality. And that would be a very good thing. Production of solar cells has increased by 32% a year, on average, for the past decade and jumped by 45% in 2005. That sounds impressive, but it has been achieved largely by subsidies from the governments of Germany, Japan and California. Only in places unconnected to an electricity grid, such as much of rural Africa and rural Asia, are solar cells truly commercially viable. But if the price were to come down because efficient cells could be made from cheap materials, that could change quickly. The rest of the world would then be able to join the poor of Africa and the rich of California, and generate solar power for itself.

Flexible Portable Power Pack P3 from Global Solar Energy

October 14th, 2006 by kalyan89 in Dye-Sensitized & Polymer Organic solar cells

flexi_gse_5512.jpg Global Solar Energy thin-film photovoltaic technology is perfect for charging many consumer products. Lightweight, foldable and durable, our solar cell designs “Portable Power Pack P3” are a proven product already used in space, military equipment, and large grid systems.
Consumer products are designed to charge and maintain your batteries
and provide power for your portable electronics including cell phones,
PDA devices, MP3 players and laptops. These Solar products are great for
campers, hikers or anyone who spends extended time outdoors.

(more…)

Quick facts on Photovoltaic energy conversion

October 14th, 2006 by kalyan89 in PV-General

source:

http://www1.eere.energy.gov/solar/pv_quick_facts.html

  • The most frequently seen application of PV is in consumer products, which use tiny amounts of direct current (dc) power, less than 1 watt (W). More than 1 billion hand-held calculators, several million watches, and a couple of million portable lights and battery chargers are all powered by PV cells.
  • PV is rapidly becoming the power supply of choice for remote and small-power, dc applications of 100 W or less.
  • PV module production has increased more than thirteen-fold since 1989. Worldwide PV module shipments in 2002 were 560 megawatts (MW). The United States shipped 120 MW.
  • 2002 worldwide production of PV modules includes 33% single-crystal silicon, 55% polycrystalline silicon, and 5% amorphous silicon, mostly used in consumer products. Modules based on cadmium telluride now represent about �% of the market. The remainder (about 6%) represents a Japanese technology of amorphous silicon on a crystalline silicon slice.
  • The cost of larger PV systems (greater than 1 kW) is measured in “levelized” costs per kWh—the costs are spread out over the system lifetime and divided by kWh output. The levelized cost is now around 30 cents/kWh.At this price, PV is cost effective for residential customers located farther than a quarter of a mile from the nearest utility line. Reliability and lifetime are steadily improving; PV manufacturers guarantee their products for up to 25 years.
  • The worldwide PV industry has grown from sales of less than $2 million in 1975 to greater than about $2 billion in 2001.
  • Around 70% of U.S. solar cell production is exported, mostly to developing countries where 2 billion people still live without electricity.
  • Since the inception of the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Photovoltaics R&D Program, thin films, one of our solar cell materials, have seen a steady rise in conversion efficiencies. Today’s conversion efficiencies, the amount of sunlight turned into electricity, have reached 18.8% for CIS cells, 15.8% for CdTe cells, and greater than 12% for a-Si cells.
  • In 2001 PV module shipments jumped to almost 400 megawatts, which represents about a $2.5 to $3 billion dollar market.
  • As of 1998, the PV industry creates about 3000 direct and indirect jobs for every $100 million of module sales.
  • A residential energy system typically costs about $8-10 per Watt. Where government incentive programs exist, together with lower prices secured through volume purchases, installed costs as low as $3-4 watt—or some 10-12 cents per kilowatt-hour can be achieved.
  • Currently, 48 states and a U.S. territory have some type of solar or renewable incentive—including investment credits, rebates, sales tax, or property tax waivers.13
  • The largest commercial PV installation in the U.S. as of 2003 is 3.4 MW for Tucson Electric Power in Tucson, Arizona.

Solar America Initiative

October 14th, 2006 by kalyan89 in R&D reports

Source: http://www1.eere.energy.gov/solar/

Mission

Accelerate widespread commercialization of clean solar energy technologies by 2015 to give the United States additional electricity supply options while reducing U.S. dependence on fossil fuels and improving the environment.
Goal

* Achieve market competitiveness for PV by 2015 through government partnerships with industry, universities, national laboratories, states, and other public entities.
* Achieve market competitiveness for CSP by 2020 through ongoing and new R&D activities.

Budget

The proposed FY 2007 budget for SAI is $148 million.

(more…)

Solar cells manufacturers – Austria

October 14th, 2006 by kalyan89 in PV Industry - Asia

Isovolta AG
Icosolar – Composite Material for the Encapsulation of Photovoltaic Modules; Power Generation – Photovoltaic Solar Cells: Research and Manufacturing: Mono/Multicrystalline, Amorphous, Thin Film, Cells, Arrays, Modules, Roof Tiles
Industriezentrum NÖ-Süd, Straße 3, 2355, Wiener Neudorf, Austria
Telephone (+43) 5 – 9595 9417 Fax (+43) 5 – 9595 9430
web url: www.isovolta.com

Solar cells Manufacturers – Czech Republic

October 14th, 2006 by kalyan89 in PV Industry - Asia

FitCraft Production sro
Production of Silicon Wafers and Photovoltaic Panels, Panels from 3W to 280W, Cutting Process of Solar Ingots, Solar Lights; Power Generation – Photovoltaic Solar Cells: Research and Manufacturing: Mono/Multicrystalline, Amorphous, Thin Film, Cells, Arrays, Modules,
Roof Tiles – Solar Electric Systems; Energy Efficiency – Lighting Devices: Energy Saving Lighting Systems, Low Voltage Fluorescent, Passive Solar Design
PO Box 026, Bludovice 141, 741 01    Novy Jicin, Czech Republic
Telephone (+420) 556 – 77 02 41 Fax (+420) 556 – 77 02 51
web url: www.fitcraft.cz

Solartec sro
Solar Cells Production and Photovoltaic Applications, PV Integrator, PV Projects and Installations; Power Generation – Photovoltaic Solar Cells: Research and Manufacturing: Mono/Multicrystalline, Amorphous, Thin Film, Cells, Arrays, Modules, Roof Tiles – Solar Electric Systems:
Tesla Industrial Area
Bldg M3, Televizni 2618, Zlin, 756 61 Roznov pod Radhostem, Czech Republic
Telephone (+420) 575 – 75 00 11 Fax (+420) 575 – 75 00 38
web url: www.solartec.cz

Solar cells manufacturers – Netherlands

October 14th, 2006 by kalyan89 in PV Industry - Asia

Energy Research Center of the Netherlands (ECN)
R&D on Sustainable Energy Resources, Efficient Use of Energy and the Accelerated Implementation of Renewable Energy; Environmental Information – Research & Development: Fundamental/Applied Scientific Projects, Programmes, Institutes/Laboratories; Power Generation – Photovoltaic Solar Cells: Research and Manufacturing: Mono/Multicrystalline, Amorphous, Thin Film, Cells, Arrays, Modules, Roof Tiles – Wind Power Systems; Fuel Cells
Post Box    Postbus 1, Westerduinweg 3, 1755 ZG Petten, Netherlands
Telephone (+31) 224 – 56 49 49 Fax (+31) 224 – 56 44 80
web url: www.ecn.nl

OTB Solar BV
Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapour Deposition Equipment for PV Cell Production, Inline Cell Production Systems; Power Generation – Photovoltaic Solar Cells: Research and Manufacturing: Mono/Multicrystalline, Amorphous, Thin Film, Cells, Arrays, Modules, Roof Tiles
Postbus 7005, 5605 JA, Luchthavenweg 10, 5657 EB    Eindhoven, Netherlands
Telephone (+31) 40 – 258 15 81 Fax (+31) 40 – 250 98 55
web url: www.otb-solar.com

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