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Completed HORIZON European Commission

Atomic-layer additive manufacturing for solar cells


Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization Friedrich-Alexander-Universitaet Erlangen-Nuernberg
Country Germany
Start Date May 01, 2022
End Date Oct 31, 2023
Duration 548 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Coordinator
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 101069310
Grant Description

The ALAMS project will provide the first application of ""atomic-layer additive manufacturing"" (ALAM), namely for the prototyping of solar cells in large arrays of microdevices.

The ALAM concept combines the principles of additive manufacturing (3D printing) with the atomic resolution achieved by the thin coating technique atomic layer deposition (ALD).

In ALD, atomic-level control is achieved by judiciously designing the surface reaction chemistry of molecular precursors at near-room temperature for it to become self-limiting.

This renders experimental use of ALD very robust to a wide range of parameter variations, since the film growth occurs in a cyclic, layer-by-layer mode.

This advantage will be exploited towards 3D printing, an area of application that ALD has never been used for until we built the first ALAM prototype in November2019.

This prototype centers around a printhead that delivers the ALD precursors to the gas phase in the vicinity of the substrate surface, with a microfluidic element delivering a lateral resolution on the order of micrometers.

The motion of the printhead with respect to the substrate allows the user to print lines and structures of arbitrarily chosen geometries, whereby each pass over a given point of the substrate adds to it exactly the amount of material corresponding to one ALD monolayer, that is, a thickness typically on the order of an atom, or 0.1 nanometer (depending on the exact ALD reaction used).

After developing the ALD chemistry needed for ALAM of the materials required to generate photovoltaic stacks, the ALAMS PoC project will apply it to a case study, namely the rapid prototyping of solar cell microdevices in large arrays. The ALAM concept, however, is valid beyond the confines of photovoltaic research.

Its commercial potential stems from its position at the convergence of two highly modern, fast-growing markets, namely, additive manufacturing ('3D printing') and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS).

All Grantees

Friedrich-Alexander-Universitaet Erlangen-Nuernberg

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