Applied Materials Details Progress Towards Industrializing PV Solar
HAMBURG, Germany--(BUSINESS WIRE)--At its annual solar analyst and press briefing today at the Photovoltaic
Solar Energy Conference and Exhibition (PVSEC), Europe’s largest solar
tradeshow, Applied Materials executives provided updates on Applied’s
solar strategy, including highlights of the company’s business and
technology roadmaps for both crystalline silicon (c-Si) and thin-film
solar photovoltaics (PV). The company also announced a number of new
c-Si solar PV products.
“We are seeing substantial progress in the global industrialization of
the solar industry,” said Mike Splinter, chairman and CEO of Applied
Materials. “The technology and products Applied is delivering allow our
customers to improve solar panel efficiency and reduce cost per watt,
leading us rapidly toward a future where solar proves itself as the
cleanest, most logical and cost-effective way of generating power.”
Preparing for the Crystalline Silicon Factory of the Future
In his keynote presentation, Dr. Mark Pinto, chief technology officer
and general manager of Applied’s Energy and Environmental Solutions
Group (EES), highlighted how factories that make c-Si solar panels are
becoming more technically advanced, with new process steps and
automation boosting solar panel efficiency, lowering manufacturing cost,
and driving up factory scale. New tools from Applied’s Precisions
Wafering Systems and Baccini Cell Systems divisions are enabling thinner
wafers, precision alignment and deposition, faster processing times and
higher wafer throughput. Advanced automation is leading to better
tool-to-tool process management, substantial material cost reductions
and higher quality. The semiconductor industry serves as an example of
how increasing investments in manufacturing technology can produce
cost-effective gains in productivity and output and enable dramatic cost
per watt reductions for end-users.
Pinto contrasted today’s mainstream c-Si factory running approximately
1,500 wafers per hour at 16% efficiency - with as much as 2% line
breakage - with the “crystalline factory of the future.” With
substantial improvements in equipment and full automation of facilities
by 2012, Pinto predicted that output will double to more than 3,000
wafers per hour at greater than 20% efficiency - with breakage cut by
more than half.
“To drive performance and reduce costs, the industry will become more
technology-intensive, with new materials, applications, integration
schemes, and factory automation and control,” said Pinto. “In the
factory of the future, Applied expects to address over 55% of the c-Si
PV solar manufacturing opportunity. With Applied’s capabilities in
equipment and processes, we continue to look for new areas where we can
work with our customers to increase their output, quality and
profitability.”
A number of new products and developments were announced at PVSEC to
help industrialize c-Si manufacturing:
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Applied Baccini Esatto Technology™, a high precision, multi-step
screen printing capability designed to increase the efficiency of c-Si
solar cells by enabling the fabrication of advanced contact structures.
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DuPont and Applied Materials announced a collaboration to advance
multiple-printing technology for increasing the absolute efficiency of
c-Si cells.
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Applied HCT Diamond™ Squarer, an innovative new system with novel
diamond wire technology, designed to reduces the cost of squaring
silicon ingots by up to one-third while offering at least twice the
cutting speed of conventional squaring processes.
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The Applied HCT MaxEdge™ wire saw is now in volume production for PV
wafering applications at key customers in Europe and Asia, including
Wacker Schott Solar. The MaxEdge system revolutionized wire saw
technology with the industry’s first dual-wire management system,
enabling significantly higher throughput and load capacity than
competitive systems, while requiring much less factory floor space and
fewer operators for equivalent megawatt output.
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LDK Solar qualified Applied’s HCT MaxEdge™ wire saws for volume
production, as part of a large-scale expansion that includes the
installation of more than 50 MaxEdge systems due to be completed in
October.
SunFab Thin Film Lines Ramping Around the World
Pinto also provided a global update on the company’s SunFab thin film
lines, which deliver the world’s largest PV solar panels, capable of
producing over 500 watts each when using Applied’s tandem junction
technology. Pinto provided performance data obtained from aperture only
testing, which is the industry’s most consistent measure of conversion
efficiency. The data showed that the tandem junction line in volume
production today, is achieving greater than 9% stable aperture area
efficiency in manufacturing.
“We continue to make progress in every aspect of the SunFab lines and
are well on our way to delivering 10% efficient SunFab panels and $1 per
watt production costs in 2010, with modules demonstrating this
efficiency in our laboratories today,” said Pinto. “This ramp is among
the most aggressive in the history of the solar industry, adding more
than 240 megawatts of solar panel manufacturing capacity in five
countries in less than two years.”
Discussing the future of SunFab development, Pinto laid out plans for
panels with 12% conversion efficiency and module costs below $0.70/watt
by 2012.
A Bright Future
George Davis, CFO discussed the FY 2010 financial outlook for the
company’s solar businesses and its Energy and Environmental Solutions
Group. Applied believes this new area of the company’s business will
lead to increasing revenue and profitability as the global economy
recovers and governments around the world look to technologies like PV
solar panels, energy-efficient glass and LED lighting to help produce
and conserve energy. Davis noted that Applied’s c-Si solar business is
already generating positive returns and that the company’s EES segment
is on track to operating profitability in 2010, excluding certain
charges.
“We are moving out of the learning phase of this business to a point
where we believe we can realize the true opportunity,” said Davis. “We
have successfully integrated several acquisitions, launched numerous new
products and are seeing renewed interest in our SunFab products. It is a
very exciting time.”
More information available on Applied’s Web site
For further information about this event, including a webcast and
slides, please visit Applied Materials’ website at: http://www.appliedmaterials.com/investors.
Safe Harbor Statement
This press release contains forward-looking statements, including thos
regarding the solar industry outlook and Applied’s solar products,
module efficiency and cost improvements, growth opportunities, and
financial outlook for EES. These statements are subject to known and
unknown risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to
differ materially from those expressed or implied by such statements,
including but not limited to: demand for solar PV products, which is
subject to many factors, including uncertain global economic and market
conditions, the duration of the recession, government policies and
incentives, technological innovations and evolving industry standards;
customers’ ability to obtain affordable capital; Applied’s ability to
(i) develop, deliver and support a broad range of products and expand
its markets, (ii) align its cost structure with business conditions,
(iii) manage its production capability, (iv) appropriately allocate R&D
resources, (v) obtain and protect IP rights in key technologies, and
(vi) attract, motivate and retain key employees; and other risks
described in Applied’s SEC filings. All forward-looking statements are
based on management’s estimates, projections and assumptions as of
September 21, 2009, and Applied undertakes no obligation to update any
such statements.