Wide Operational Range Pulsed Fiber Laser for Processing Thin Film Photovoltaic Panels

By: Shinobu Tamaoki

Sumitomo Electric Inc.

Pulse fiber lasers (PFL) have become widely popular for micro-machining applications due to their many benefits, such as the high beam quality, compactness, high wall-plug efficiency, and reliability. MOPA (Master Oscillator Power Amplifier) architectures, which provide temporal pulse shape control, are particularly interesting.

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The Percussion Drilling of SI using a 20W MOPA Based YB Fiber Laser

By: Kun Li, William O’Neill, Jack Gabzdyl

Institute for Manufacturing, University of Cambridge
SPI Lasers

The micro-machining of silicon components for use in the MEMS fabrication and microelectronics industry is well-established, and the demand for semiconductors started to recover after the 2008 downturn. Laser micro-drilled interconnect via holes is an application that has been applied in high volume manufacturing since 1995. In 2006, the laser held 70% of the microvia market because of its broad processing capabilities with a wide range of materials. Meanwhile the photovoltaic (PV) industry has experienced enormous growth over last few years, and it forecasts to grow to $100 billion between 2008 and 2013 (Lux Research, NY). As the most important material, c-Silicon has 77% of market share of world production of solar cells NanoMarket web (2009). Additionally, many novel high efficiency solar cell concepts (Emitter Wrap Through & Metal Wrap Through) are only feasible with laser technology, since it satisfies the requirement of drilling a few thousand holes (50-100µm in diameter) per second in c-Si.

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