Startup Twin Creek Technologies is attacking the cost of
solar by getting more bang from a wafer of silicon. After four years of work,
the San Jose, Calif.-based company today is coming out of stealth and
introducing its product, a machine designed to slash the cost of solar cell
manufacturing. The company claims its Hyperion system cuts the cost of making a
solar cell in half and brings total production cost from about 85 cents a watt
today to around 50 cents. Hyperion is now being evaluated by leading solar
manufacturers and the company expects to have a number of them operating by
next year, according to CEO Siva Sivaram. The machine also allows solar makers
to make flexible silicon cells. In an effort
to lower material costs, solar manufacturers over the years have been able to
use thinner wafers. Square wafers are sawed off from ingots of very pure
silicon. During production, wafers are treated and turned into solar cells.
Then cells are assembled into a solar panel. But getting beyond 200-micron
thickness has problems because wafers get brittle, which limits the costs which
can be saved on materials, Sivaram said. The Hyperion system uses a technique
called proton induced exfoliation to create slices as thin as 20 microns from
existing wafers. "It's like a ream of paper and you're taking sheets off
of it," Sivaram said.
The machine blasts hydrogen ions, or protons, at
silicon wafers. The protons embed themselves as a layer of bubbles. Then, the
machine heats up the wafer to expand the bubbles to break off a sheet from the
wafer. This effect of hydrogen ions implanting themselves has been observed for
decades, but using it for solar cell production required totally different
engineering with high energy and high doses, Sivaram said. The thinner cells
are as efficient as thicker ones and are flexible so they could be used for
solar awnings or other building-integrated photovoltaics. The company itself is
stacked with an experienced group of executives and engineers, including
co-founder and chief scientist Chris Petti. It has raised $93 million from
Crosslink Capital, Benchmark Capital, Artis, DAG Ventures, and a Taiwanese
funding, according to a representative. Twin Creek Technologies has also
received $30 million in loans from the state of Mississippi, where it has a
demonstration plant. There solar manufacturers can come and test their specific
production processes with Hyperion, Sivaram said. If the company does sign on
manufacturers to use its equipment, it could result in a significant cost
reduction for solar power consumers. Sivaram estimates that getting to 50 cents
a watt production costs would bring the industry to about $1 per watt
installed, a price that could make solar cheaper than grid power in many
places.
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