CIGS Rundown and CIGS 2.0: AQT Partners with Solar Enertech, HelioPower

The promise of CIGS solar technology is finally making it to market in a big way.

These are interesting times for the CIGS solar community. Here's a very brief recap of the last few months:



The first wave of CIGS aspirants have been big on hype but less convincing in scaling up at a profitable market price.  Solar still comes down to dollar per watt in what is (arguably) a commoditized marketplace.

Entering this scenario are some new CIGS players in what can be described as CIGS 2.0. This approach involves getting to manufacturing scale and low product cost with a capital-efficient model and innovative business plan, not the brute force, build-a-$1-billion-factory-from-scratch method.



One of these new CIGS players is AQT, or Applied Quantum Technologies. The firm recently raised $10 million and has managed to get pretty far on efficiency in a relatively short time.  They've produced CIGS materials at a NREL-validated efficiency of greater than 10 percent.  It has taken most of the other CIGS players several years to reach that efficiency milestone.



The firm announced a partnering deal with Intevac last month, which will provide AQT with manufacturing capacity for the production of AQT’s CIGS cells.  AQT plans to receive its first manufacturing system in the second quarter of this year at its Silicon Valley R&D and production facility.



Today, AQT announced partnerships with Solar Enertech and HelioPower.  Solar Enertech, a large-scale producer of photovoltaic cells and modules, is working with AQT as a module manufacturing partner for AQT’s CIGS cells and will assist with product certification and qualification beginning in the second half of this year.   HelioPower, a solar power design and installation firm, has engineered more than 1,000 solar power systems for residential, commercial, community and utility-scale partners since 2001.