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Market Research Report
Thin Film Photovoltaics and Batteries 2010-2020
| Published by |
IDTechEx Ltd. |
| Published |
April, 2010 |
Product code |
117619 |
| Content info |
250 Pages - Tables 23 - Figures 133 |
| Price |
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This publication has been discontinued on June 27, 2011.
Below is the updated product.
Published: September, 2011
Product code: 200164
Abstract
Description
This comprehensive report gives a thorough analysis of printed and thin film
photovoltaics and batteries.
The report covers companies, research institutes and universities that are
active in developing and commercialising thin film technologies for
photovoltaics and batteries. Photovoltaic technologies covered include CIGS,
CdTe DSSC, a-Si and organic photovoltaics. Learn how these technologies, each
at a different stage of development and adoption, are driven forward by both
government and leading companies in the field.
Materials and devices are covered, as well as manufacturing techniques,
focussing on various high speed printing technologies that can be utilised.
Silicon photocells are seen in many places but the technology is limited.
Crystalline silicon will never give tightly rollable devices let alone
transparent ones or even low cost power generation on flexible substrates.
Fortunately there are many new alternatives. Proprietary nano-particle silicon
printing processes are developed by companies such as Innovalight and Kovio
and they promise many of the photovoltaic features that conventional silicon
can never achieve. Also, new materials and deposition techniques promise high
performance, lightweight flexible solar cells.
Amorphous silicon technologies also offer a thin film alternative at a lower
cost but unfortunately lower efficiency.
Report Statistics
- Pages: 250
- Tables: 23
- Figures: 133
- Companies: 49
- Forecasts to: 2020
- Last update: April 2010
Table of Contents
1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
2. INTRODUCTION AND SCOPE
- 2.1. Thin Film Photovoltaic Forecasts
- 2.2. Battery Forecasts
3. BATTERIES
- 3.1. Introduction
- 3.2. History
- 3.3. Structure
- 3.4. Key Products in Printed Batteries Industry
- 3.5. Principles and Operation
- 3.6. Supercapacitors supplement or rival batteries?
- 3.7. Thin Film Batteries - key companies
- 3.7.1. Power Paper
- 3.7.2. Blue Spark Technologies Inc.
- 3.7.3. Enfucell
- 3.7.4. Cymbet Corporation
- 3.7.5. Solicore
- 3.7.6. Infinite Power Solutions (IPS)
- 3.7.7. Excellatron
- 3.7.8. Nanotecture
4. PHOTOVOLTAICS
- 4.1. Introduction
- 4.2. History
5. COMPANY PROFILES BY TECHNOLOGY
- 5.1. Principles and operations
- 5.2. Amorphous/nanoparticle Si
- 5.2.1. Introduction-Brief Description of technology
- 5.3. Amorphous /nanoparticle Si - Key Companies
- 5.3.1. Sharp
- 5.3.2. United Solar Ovonic
- 5.3.3. Mitsubishi Heavy industries
- 5.3.4. Kaneka
- 5.3.5. Q-cells (SONTOR and VHF-Technologies SA)
- 5.3.6. Fuji Electric Systems Co., Ltd.
- 5.3.7. ersol Solar Energy AG
- 5.3.8. Innovalight
- 5.4. CdTe
- 5.4.1. Introduction-Brief Description of technology
- 5.5. CdTe Key Companies
- 5.5.1. First Solar
- 5.5.2. Calyxo
- 5.5.3. Abound Solar
- 5.5.4. PrimeStar Solar
- 5.6. CIGS - CIS
- 5.6.1. Introduction - Brief Description of technology
- 5.7. CIGS - Key Companies
- 5.7.1. Ascent Solar Technologies, Inc.
- 5.7.2. Avancis
- 5.7.3. DayStar Technologies
- 5.7.4. Global Solar Energy
- 5.7.5. HelioVolt
- 5.7.6. Honda Soltec Co., Ltd.
- 5.7.7. IBM
- 5.7.8. Johanna Solar Technology
- 5.7.9. Miasole
- 5.7.10. Nanosolar
- 5.7.11. Odersun
- 5.7.12. Showa Shell Sekiyu
- 5.7.13. Solibro
- 5.7.14. Solyndra
- 5.7.15. Sulfurcell
- 5.7.16. Wurth Solar
- 5.8. DSSC
- 5.8.1. Introduction-Brief Description of technology
- 5.9. DSSC - Key Companies
- 5.9.1. G24 Innovations
- 5.9.2. Dyesol
- 5.10. Organic Photovoltaics
- 5.10.1. Introduction - Brief Description of technology
- 5.11. Organic Photovoltaics - Key Companies
- 5.11.1. Konarka
- 5.11.2. Plextronics
- 5.11.3. Solarmer
- 5.11.4. Heliatek
- 5.12. Research Institutes/Universities involved with thin film
photovoltaic technologies
- 5.12.1. AIST - National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and
Technology
- 5.12.2. Arizona State University
- 5.12.3. Colorado State University
- 5.12.4. Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne
- 5.12.5. Florida Solar Energy Centre
- 5.12.6. Fraunhofer ISE
- 5.12.7. Helsinki University of technology (TKK)
- 5.12.8. IMEC
- 5.12.9. Imperial College London
- 5.12.10. Idaho National Laboratory (INL)
- 5.12.11. KAIST - Korean Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
- 5.12.12. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
- 5.12.13. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
- 5.12.14. National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)
- 5.12.15. University of Delaware - Institute of Energy Conversion (IEC)
6. APPLICATIONS
- 6.1. Applications of printed batteries
- 6.2. Batteries
- 6.2.1. Radio Frequency Identification (RFID)
- 6.2.2. Smart Cards
- 6.2.3. Iontophoretic Devices
- 6.2.4. Other Devices
- 6.3. Photovoltaics
- 6.3.1. Building integrated solar electric power
- 6.3.2. Solar Chargers
- 6.3.3. Military applications
- 6.3.4. Other applications
7. FUTURE TRENDS AND FORECASTS FOR PRINTING TECHNOLOGIES
APPENDIX 1: PRINCIPLES AND OPERATION OF DSSCS AND ORGANIC SOLAR CELLS
APPENDIX 2: MATERIALS
APPENDIX 3: PRINTING/PATTERNING TECHNIQUES
APPENDIX 4: IDTECHEX PUBLICATIONS AND CONSULTANCY
TABLES
- 1.1. Thin film technologies Market Share and Module Costs
- 1.2. Types of printed/thin film photovoltaics beyond crystalline
silicon compared, with examples of suppliers
- 1.3. Market size for thin film photovoltaic technologies beyond
silicon technologies % of the market that is printed and flexible
- 1.4. Potential division of technologies in the thin film sector -
flexible
- 1.5. Potential division of technologies in the thin film sector -
printed
- 1.6. Market size for thin film batteries % of the market that is
printed and flexible
- 2.1. Market size for thin film photovoltaic technologies beyond
silicon technologies % of the market that is printed and flexible
- 2.2. Market size for thin film batteries % of the market that is
printed and flexible
- 3.1. Important milestones in battery history
- 3.2. Printed battery product and specification comparison
- 3.3. Printed battery materials comparison
- 3.4. The half cell and overall chemical reactions that occur in a
Zn/MnO2 battery
- 3.5. Discharge rate, current, and load
- 3.6. Parameter ranking for different battery chemistries
- 3.7. Battery characteristics
- 4.1. Comparison of the power conversion technologies of different
types of solar cell technologies
- 4.2. Important milestones in the development of photovoltaic cells
- 6.1. Applications of printed batteries by vendor
- 6.2. Technical differences between Active and Passive RFID
technologies
- 6.3. Summary of functional capabilities of Active and Passive RFID
technologies
- 6.4. Some of the manufacturers that provide printed batteries for
smart card applications
- 7.1. Market size for thin film photovoltaic technologies beyond
silicon technologies % of the market that is printed and flexible ($ billion)
- 7.2. Market size for thin film batteries % of the market that is
printed and flexible
FIGURES
- 1.1. World market for Photovoltaics in 2008
- 1.2. Number of organisations developing printed and potentially
printed electronics worldwide
- 2.1. Market size for CIGS and percentage flexible, percentage
printed
- 2.2. Market size for a-Si and percentage flexible, percentage
printed
- 3.1. Internal structure of Power Paper Battery
- 3.2. Diagram of the operation of a battery
- 3.3. Discharge characteristics of a Power Paper STD-3 printed
battery
- 3.4. Enfucell SoftBattery™
- 3.5. The Cymbet EnerChip™
- 3.6. Flexion ™
- 3.7. LiTESTAR™
- 3.8. Thin-film solid-state batteries by Excellatron
- 4.1. Average potential electricity production with photovoltaics
- 4.2. Worldwide PV Shipments 1988-2004
- 4.3. Progress of confirmed research-scale photovoltaic device
efficiencies, under AM 1.5 simulated solar illumination, for a variety of
technologies
- 4.4. Progress in power conversion efficiency for a-Si, polymer, and
small molecule photovoltaic cells
- 4.5. Comparison of the efficiency (in arbitrary units, since no
spectral mismatch correction was performed) of “printed like”
(doctor bladed) vs.spin-coated organic solar cells
- 5.1. Typical a-Si p-i-n design
- 5.2. a-Si hydrogenation
- 5.3. United Solar Ovonics thin film amorphous silicon cell
configuration
- 5.4. Kaneka semi-translucent PV module
- 5.5. FES F-WAVE
- 5.6. Innovalight Cell
- 5.7. CdTe thin film solar cell
- 5.8. Schematic representation of a CIGS thin film solar cell
- 5.9. Ascent Solar' s Flexible Products
- 5.10. Honda Soltec' s manufacturing facility
- 5.11. Model and design of Johanna Solar' s production facility in
Brandenburg
- 5.12. Parts of Nanosolar' s module manufacturing process
- 5.13. The POGO designer bag produced by Berlin manufacturer Bagjack
- 5.14. Wurth Solar' s production plant, CISfab in Schwabisch Hall
- 5.15. Dyesol' s Dye Solar Cells interconnected and integrated into
modules (tiles)
- 5.16. Konarka' s Power Plastic®
- 5.17. The Tsukuba Center Solar Power Plant
- 5.18. Transparent dye solar module manufactured at Fraunhofer ISE
with a screen printing procedure using glass frit technology
- 5.19. Schematic layer structure of a pentacene-C60 tandem organic
solar cell
- 6.1. Patents containing the terms RFID and Battery
- 6.2. Active RFID patents
- 6.3. Schematic diagram of PowerCosmetics Micro-electronic patch
- 6.4. Estee Lauder Perfectionist Power Correcting Patch
- 6.5. Anti-wrinkle demonstration
- 6.6. Audio paper capable of recording and playing back audio
- 6.7. Hasbro Thin-Tronix™ Poster Phone and Poster Radio
- 6.8. PowerFilm AA Charger
- 6.9. Two wire photovoltaic fiber concept
- 7.1. Market size for CIGS and percentage flexible, percentage
printed
- 7.2. Market size for a-Si and percentage flexible, percentage
printed
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