Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Progress to Higher Efficiency Thin Film Solar Cells




I totally did not expect this. we really started at five to ten percent conversions decades ago.  now we are looking at an astonding 65 % after it took forever to just get it up to 20%.

this should aslso allow the heat to be sharply reduced as well as all that is caused by absorbing sunlight and reradiation as infrarred radiation.

this will be a huge shift in our tech.  maybe now wee can cover our cars to load our batteries with a nighttime supply of solar power.  None of this is implausible any longer with a 65% power conversion

Progress to Higher Efficiency Thin Film Solar Cells

August 16, 2022 by Brian Wang



AMOLF group leader Esther Alarcon Llado says: “based on the strong light trapping performance of our patterns, we estimate that PV efficiencies above 20% could be achieved for a 1 μm-thick c-Si cell, which would represent an absolute breakthrough toward flexible, lightweight c-Si PV.

Also, thinner Si absorbers are more tolerant to electronic defects compared to the thick counterparts. This means that thin Si cells with high efficiency could also be made from lower grade Silicon, thereby reducing the energy needs for raw Si purification and reducing their energy pay-back time. Hyperuniform patterned thin PV is a highly promising technology. While there is still plenty of work to be done to make such thin high efficiency cells part of our living environment, this work makes us very optimistic that this will happen soon.”



Nasim Tavakoli, Richard Spalding, Alexander Lambertz, Pepijn Koppejan, Georgios Gkantzounis, Chenglong Wan, Ruslan Röhrich, Evgenia Kontoleta, A. Femius Koenderink, Riccardo Sapienza, Marian Florescu, and Esther Alarcon-Llado

ACS Photonics 2022 9 (4), 1206-1217
DOI: 10.1021/acsphotonics.1c01668

Thin, flexible, and invisible solar cells will be a ubiquitous technology in the near future. Ultrathin crystalline silicon (c-Si) cells capitalize on the success of bulk silicon cells while being lightweight and mechanically flexible, but suffer from poor absorption and efficiency. Here we present a new family of surface texturing, based on correlated disordered hyperuniform patterns, capable of efficiently coupling the incident spectrum into the silicon slab optical modes. We experimentally demonstrate 66.5% solar light absorption in free-standing 1 μm c-Si layers by hyperuniform nanostructuring for the spectral range of 400 to 1050 nm. The absorption equivalent photocurrent derived from our measurements is 26.3 mA/cm2, which is far above the highest found in literature for Si of similar thickness. Considering state-of-the-art Si PV technologies, we estimate that the enhanced light trapping can result in a cell efficiency above 15%. The light absorption can potentially be increased up to 33.8 mA/cm2 by incorporating a back-reflector and improved antireflection, for which we estimate a photovoltaic efficiency above 21% for 1 μm thick Si cells.

Another Solar Cell Scientific Achievement

Second is about CZTSSe (copper, zinc, tin with some sulfur and selenium) thin-film solar cells, which are eco-friendly general-purpose thin-film solar cells. These could become, after silicon, one of the dominant/mainstream thin-film (and displacing thick film) solar cell types of the future.

No indium for bulk material layer(s), thus alleviates supply issues around indium.
Also doesn’t need gallium as the bulk of any layer, for the people worried about gallium.

DGIST – Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology



Paper:

Effect of Metal-Precursor Stacking Order on Volume-Defect Formation in CZTSSe Thin Film: Formation Mechanism of Blisters and Nanopores
Se-Yun Kim, Seung-Hyun Kim, Dae-Ho Son, Hyesun Yoo, Seongyeon Kim, Sammi Kim, Young-Ill Kim, Si-Nae Park, Dong-Hwan Jeon, Jaebaek Lee, Hyo-Jeong Jo, Shi-Joon Sung, Dae-Kue Hwang, Kee-Jeong Yang, Dae-Hwan Kim, and Jin-Kyu Kang
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces 2022 14 (27), 30649-30657

DOI: 10.1021/acsami.2c01892 https://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.2c01892 https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsami.2c01892

No comments:

Post a Comment