Title :
Making Solar Cells a Reality in Every Home: Opportunities and Challenges for Photovoltaic Device Design
Author :
Singh, Rajdeep ; Alapatt, Githin F. ; Lakhtakia, A.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Clemson Univ., Clemson, SC, USA
Abstract :
Globally, the cumulative installed photovoltaic (PV) capacity has topped the 100-gigawatt (GW) milestone and is expected to reach 200 GW by the year 2015. More than 90% of the installed PV capacity employs bulk-silicon solar cells. Engineering problems that include thermal and optical challenges have not permitted the large-scale commercialization of concentration PV systems, lack of functional reliability-and the concomitant lack of economic bankability-being a major barrier. For increasing the efficiency of single-junction cells beyond the Shockley-Queisser limit, several approaches based on concepts such as multiple exciton generation, carrier multiplication, hot-carrier extraction, etc., have been proposed; however, these do not seem to be commercially viable. Since both bulk-silicon and thin-film (amorphous silicon, cadmium telluride, and copper indium gallium selenide) solar cells remain as the only two commercially viable options for terrestrial PV applications, a multi-terminal multi-junction architecture appears promising for inexpensive PV electricity generation with efficiency exceeding the currently feasible 25%. The architecture exploits the present commercial silicon solar cells along with abundant and ultra-low-cost materials such as Cu2O. With the availability of well-controlled manufacturing processes at the sub 2-nm length scale, it will become possible to manufacture ultra-high efficiency and ultra-low cost PV electricity generation modules based on silicon.
Keywords :
elemental semiconductors; silicon; solar cells; Shockley-Queisser limit; Si; bulk-silicon solar cells; carrier multiplication; hot-carrier extraction; manufacturing processes; multiple exciton generation; multiterminal multijunction architecture; photovoltaic device design; single-junction cells; thin-film solar cells; Computer architecture; Electricity; Manufacturing; Photovoltaic cells; Photovoltaic systems; Silicon; Manufacturing; multi-terminal multi-junction architecture; nano-silicon; photovoltaics;
Journal_Title :
Electron Devices Society, IEEE Journal of the
DOI :
10.1109/JEDS.2013.2280887