LAPSE:2023.23654
Published Article

LAPSE:2023.23654
On the Potential of Silicon Intermediate Band Solar Cells
March 27, 2023
Abstract
Intermediate band solar cells (IBSCs) have an efficiency limit of 63.2%, which is significantly higher than the 40.7% limit for conventional single gap solar cells. In order to achieve the maximum efficiency, the total bandgap of the cell should be in the range of ~2 eV. However, that fact does not prevent other cells based on different semiconductor bandgaps from benefiting from the presence of an intermediate band (IB) within their bandgap. Since silicon (1.12 eV bandgap) is the dominant material in solar cell technology, it is of interest to determine the limit efficiency of a silicon IBSC, because even a modest gain in efficiency could trigger a large commercial interest if the IB is implemented at low cost. In this work we study the limit efficiency of silicon-based IBSCs considering operating conditions that include the use of non-ideal photon casting between the optical transitions, different light intensities and Auger recombination. The results lead to the conclusion that a silicon IBSC, operating under the conventional model in which the sub-bandgaps add to the total silicon gap, provides an efficiency gain if operated in the medium-high concentration range. The performance of these devices is affected by Auger recombination only under extremely high concentrations.
Intermediate band solar cells (IBSCs) have an efficiency limit of 63.2%, which is significantly higher than the 40.7% limit for conventional single gap solar cells. In order to achieve the maximum efficiency, the total bandgap of the cell should be in the range of ~2 eV. However, that fact does not prevent other cells based on different semiconductor bandgaps from benefiting from the presence of an intermediate band (IB) within their bandgap. Since silicon (1.12 eV bandgap) is the dominant material in solar cell technology, it is of interest to determine the limit efficiency of a silicon IBSC, because even a modest gain in efficiency could trigger a large commercial interest if the IB is implemented at low cost. In this work we study the limit efficiency of silicon-based IBSCs considering operating conditions that include the use of non-ideal photon casting between the optical transitions, different light intensities and Auger recombination. The results lead to the conclusion that a silicon IBSC, operating under the conventional model in which the sub-bandgaps add to the total silicon gap, provides an efficiency gain if operated in the medium-high concentration range. The performance of these devices is affected by Auger recombination only under extremely high concentrations.
Record ID
Keywords
Auger recombination, intermediate band solar cells, limit efficiency, non-overlapped coefficients, silicon
Subject
Suggested Citation
López E, Martí A, Antolín E, Luque A. On the Potential of Silicon Intermediate Band Solar Cells. (2023). LAPSE:2023.23654
Author Affiliations
López E: Instituto de Energía Solar, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Avenida Complutense 30, 28040 Madrid, Spain [ORCID]
Martí A: Instituto de Energía Solar, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Avenida Complutense 30, 28040 Madrid, Spain [ORCID]
Antolín E: Instituto de Energía Solar, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Avenida Complutense 30, 28040 Madrid, Spain [ORCID]
Luque A: Instituto de Energía Solar, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Avenida Complutense 30, 28040 Madrid, Spain
Martí A: Instituto de Energía Solar, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Avenida Complutense 30, 28040 Madrid, Spain [ORCID]
Antolín E: Instituto de Energía Solar, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Avenida Complutense 30, 28040 Madrid, Spain [ORCID]
Luque A: Instituto de Energía Solar, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Avenida Complutense 30, 28040 Madrid, Spain
Journal Name
Energies
Volume
13
Issue
12
Article Number
E3044
Year
2020
Publication Date
2020-06-12
ISSN
1996-1073
Version Comments
Original Submission
Other Meta
PII: en13123044, Publication Type: Journal Article
Record Map
Published Article

LAPSE:2023.23654
This Record
External Link

https://doi.org/10.3390/en13123044
Publisher Version
Download
Meta
Record Statistics
Record Views
109
Version History
[v1] (Original Submission)
Mar 27, 2023
Verified by curator on
Mar 27, 2023
This Version Number
v1
Citations
Most Recent
This Version
URL Here
https://psecommunity.org/LAPSE:2023.23654
Record Owner
Auto Uploader for LAPSE
Links to Related Works
