By proving inductively coupled plasma can be used for HJT-cell production, the research institute and corporate partner will now work on ways to find cost-effective production methods with the aim of making a GW scale roll out of HJT cells viableGerman solar tooling provider Singulus Technologies has announced the start of a second phase of its joint research project with the Solar Energy Research Institute of Singapore (SERIS) at the National University of Singapore (NUS), to discover more cost-effective methods of producing heterojunction cells. The collaboration is set to last 18 months and ...Den vollständigen Artikel lesen ...