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Cambridge | Jan-14 | Boosting the Future Efficiency of Solar Technology

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Presentation by Andrew Musser, Cambridge University, Smart Villages Technology Workshop, Cambridge 14 January 2014 The purpose of the workshop was to bring together leading UK researchers to discuss emerging technologies for the sustainable production and use of energy in rural communities in developing countries, and to take a ‘look ahead’ at scientific developments and technologies that might be influential over the next 10 - 20 years. It was held under the auspices of the ‘smart villages’ initiative, a three - year project to advance sustain able energy provision for development in off - grid villages in Africa, Asia and Latin America.

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Page 1: Cambridge | Jan-14 | Boosting the Future Efficiency of Solar Technology

Andrew J Musser

Optoelectronics Group, University of Cambridge

Boosting the Future

Efficiency of Solar

Technology

15.01.2014

Page 2: Cambridge | Jan-14 | Boosting the Future Efficiency of Solar Technology

Solar Cells and Thermalization

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Schockley-Quiesser limit sets the maximum efficiency at ~33%...

but can we do better?

Page 3: Cambridge | Jan-14 | Boosting the Future Efficiency of Solar Technology

Brute Force with Tandem Devices…

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Difficult to design, expensive to make

Page 4: Cambridge | Jan-14 | Boosting the Future Efficiency of Solar Technology

… or Harness the Power of Quantum Mechanics

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Use ‘singlet exciton fission’ to split the energy from

blue photons in two and beat the Schockley-Queisser limit

Page 5: Cambridge | Jan-14 | Boosting the Future Efficiency of Solar Technology

Progress in Device Efficiency

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Nayak et al., Advanced Materials 2013

Amorphous Si

Polycryst. Si

Cryst Si (21%)