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April 2010
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Press Contact:
Anne
Meerboth-Maltz
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solarpeq 2010 specialist article No. 4
Robots on the Advance
With cost cutting in mind, the photovoltaics industry increasingly relies on automation expecting it to result in sustained high product quality and increased productivity.
Industrial robots feed and discharge solar cell production lines and sort the finished components by pick-and-place processes. They handle glass panes, cut films and foils and assemble frames around solar modules and have recently even started installing junction boxes. Be it at Q-Cells in Bitterfeld, at Conergy in Frankfurt/Oder or Bosch Solar Energy in Erfurt – most production lines in the solar sector are highly automated these days.
For a good reason: “Here in Europe we have to increase capacities to remain competitive,” says Carsten Busch, Head of the Solar Unit at ABB Automation in Friedberg, who adds that price pressure is enormous. “If we want to keep manufacturing modules in Germany then robots will have to be used for even more tasks in the future. The automotive industry has proven that successful manufacturing is possible here in this country.” The solar sector is increasingly interested in manufacturing concepts that have “empowered” the likes of Mercedes, Porsche or BMW. Many manufacturers of automation technology possess precisely this know-how.
ABB offers robots for nearly all segments of cell and module production – ranging from FlexPickers for transferring silicon cells and lines for handling and conveying sheet glass to systems for packaging and palletizing the finished solar modules. Carsten Busch emphasizes that “in the solar sector the prime objective is not to save labor costs.” But if large product volumes of the same high quality are to be manufactured, robots simply outperform humans. An example is the cross-soldering of so-called strings, i.e. strings of already connected solar cells. “When just one single cross-soldering is not 100% perfect, it affects the efficiency of the entire module,” explains Carsten Busch. A single dry soldered joint can even render a complete solar module useless. This is why more and more producers are switching to the fully automatic soldering of cells and strings.
Automotive Industry as a Role Model
“Robots never have a bad day,” confirms Hartmut Wirths at Bosch Rexroth. “Furthermore, the machine does not care where it stands and always gives you consistent quality.” Other benefits are the readiness for use 24/7 and the enormous speed of robots. “Only with automation can you achieve the high production volumes and short cycle times needed for mass production of solar cells,” says Carsten Busch. Robots also bring higher efficiency in the thin-film solar segment: “Glass sheets are becoming larger and also thinner – and hence more sensitive. Each piece of glass that is destroyed in the process costs money.”
Robots have already become the standard worldwide for the production of wafers, i.e. thin silicon slices cut from ingots. “If an employee drops a silicon ingot like this it costs the company nearly US$ 2,000,” says Carsten Busch and explains that the material is brittle and therefore breaks into many pieces. Man remains an instability factor. Which is why ingots are now handled by robots even in Asia and are glued to a glass substrate as a preparation for cutting wafers.
This in turn makes wafer production attractive for producers of industrial robots. Only recently, Kuka Systems in Augsburg acquired the relevant know-how from Czech machine builder Themis. With this move the plant manufacturer expands its product portfolio for photovoltaics to include various special dicing saws. Kuka intends to supply highly automated, turn-key wafer lines in the future. So far the company had focused on module manufacturing and solutions for glass handling, string and or cross-soldering, placing strings on foil and glass, framing of modules as well as the subsequent quality tests. Describing the range, Albert Vontz, Product Group Manager Solar Technologies at Kuka, states: “We can deliver module lines with up to 100% automation. And we are the only ones.”
Nevertheless, the Augsburg-based company will have to count on strong competition. Reis Robotics, for example, is a successful market player with its buckling arm robots and linear robot units. The company acquired its experience as a supplier of automotive manufacturing lines for autoglass, for instance. At glasstec 2008, the leading international trade fair for the glass sector where companies also present solar applications, Reis exhibited a comprehensive product portfolio. Another strong player not only in automation technology for the photovoltaics industry is Manz Automation. Cooperating closely with machine builders Roth & Rau, they provide their customers with systems and components for automation, quality assurance and laser process engineering. These suppliers will present their manufacturing technology solutions at solarpeq 2010, International Trade Fair for Solar Production Equipment, held in Düsseldorf, Germany from September 28 – October 1, 2010. The premiere staging of this event will take place concurrently with glasstec 2010, International Trade Fair for Glass Production – Processing – Products.
Module Manufacturing Neglected
ABB Unit Manager Carsten Busch feels that the market will remain in motion: “Up to mid 2008, the solar sector underwent dramatic growth.” Companies were doing their utmost to increase capacities fast and get their production going. To this end they also tolerated constraints. According to Carsten Busch “a certain degree of automation has already been achieved in cell production. But this does not hold true for module production everywhere.”
In the production of thin-film modules automation of the so-called front-end, i.e. the production and texturing of the individual layers, is also in the “advanced” stage. But Carsten Busch still sees considerable capacity in the finishing of coated glass sheets starting with lamination: “From the beginning there was high cost awareness among cell manufacturers. In this area the expenses associated with automation seemed rather low compared to the costs of the equipment itself.” In contrast to this, the industry did not initially focus so much on efficiency in module production – because as long as solar modules were selling well, companies did not feel any pressure to rationalize especially since many process steps can be performed manually.
“In the past manufacturers with a capacity of ten to fifteen Megawatts were considered large,” comments Carsten Busch. But the use of robots does not seem to be very rewarding with such a magnitude. This has changed though: “Today factories typically have capacities of up to 200 Megawatts and in the future this figure will probably be in the Gigawatts region.” According to Carsten Busch “technology is progressing fast and equipment is changing, too. In cell production for example, the capacity is higher and lines wider, which is why robots serving this larger working space are increasingly in demand.”
“Conveyor technology for the solar industry is Bosch Rexroth’s focus. The basic concept is “take from A to B,” says Hartmut Wirths.” However, the details are the challenges: “We work with standard components and still have to fulfil specific requirements for the solar sector. For instance, in the thin-film segment it is about handling glass at relatively high temperatures.”
Crisis creates Time for Innovations
However, even “regular” wafers confront engineers with increasing challenges. The wafers are becoming increasingly thinner and therefore more and more fragile. At the same time, PV companies want to produce 3,600 solar cells on one line per hour – with the minimum amount of breakage. To pick up the sensitive wafers without actually touching them, plant manufacturers have turned to a trick from the physics sector: the so-called Bernoulli Principle. According to this, an increase in speed in a gas stream is always correlated with a drop in pressure. This phenomenon not only ensures that aircrafts fly but also that objects can be picked up by means of suction using compressed air.
Suppliers are using the current crisis to develop technologies further. “To us the growth pause is a welcome opportunity to develop our products to maturity. The firm supplies equipment producers with solutions ranging from individual components to complete sub-assemblies needed to move wafers or glass substrates,” states Michael Karcher of the automation specialist Festo. According to Michael Karcher, suppliers have until now been working off backlog orders and their top priority was to reduce cycle times even further. “Fortunately, this situation has calmed down somewhat. We now have a buyers’ market with excess capacities and companies are now concentrating on line optimization. They want to cut out process steps that are very costly,” explains Michael Karcher.
Initially, the solar sector “often adopted solutions from the semi-conductor industry because processes are similar there,” remarks Michael Karcher. Over time, PV producers have also focused more on their costs. And robots help them to save money – even though companies have to make initial investments first.
Photo credits:
1.) Suction and conveying processes: Robots capable of transporting solar technology fast and safely are of growing importance in the field of photovoltaics. (Source: Grenzebach)
2.) Ready for the dicing saws: Silicon ingots are handled by robots and glued onto glass substrates. (Source: Conergy)
3.) You can only watch: The special gripper sorts solar cells into up to 21 different quality grades at lightning speed. Humans only need to watch. (Source: Conergy)
4.) In module production: Fully automatic cross-soldering of strings, the solar cells connected in series. (Source: Conergy)
5.) Final assembly: Robots attach junction boxes to the module reverse. (Source: Conergy)
You will find the photos for this professional article online at:
www.solarpeq.com,
"Press Service", "Professional Articles" (zip file at end of article)
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