From ElectricalEngineer.com: September 29,2008
Scientists
at the U.S. Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy Laboratory
(NREL) have set a world record in solar cell efficiency with a
photovoltaic device that converts 40.8 percent of the light that hits
it into electricity. This is the highest confirmed efficiency of any
photovoltaic device to date.
The inverted metamorphic triple-junction solar cell was designed,
fabricated and independently measured at NREL. The 40.8 percent
efficiency was measured under concentrated light of 326 suns. One sun
is about the amount of light that typically hits Earth on a sunny day.
The new cell is a natural candidate for the space satellite market and
for terrestrial concentrated photovoltaic arrays, which use lenses or
mirrors to focus sunlight onto the solar cells.
The new solar cell differs significantly from the previous record
holder – also based on a NREL design. Instead of using a germanium
wafer as the bottom junction of the device, the new design uses
compositions of gallium indium phosphide and gallium indium arsenide to
split the solar spectrum into three equal parts that are absorbed by
each of the cell's three junctions for higher potential efficiencies.
This is accomplished by growing the solar cell on a gallium arsenide
wafer, flipping it over, then removing the wafer. The resulting device
is extremely thin and light and represents a new class of solar cells
with advantages in performance, design, operation and cost.
NREL's Mark Wanlass invented the original inverted cell, which
recently won a R&D 100 award. His design was modified by a team led
by John Geisz that further optimized the junction energies by making
the middle junction metamorphic as well as the bottom junction.
Metamorphic junctions are lattice mismatched – their atoms don't line
up. The material properties of the mismatched semiconductors allows for
greater potential conversion of sunlight.
NREL is the U.S. Department of Energy's primary national laboratory
for renewable energy and energy efficiency research and development.
NREL is operated for DOE by Midwest Research Institute and Battelle.
Source: http://www.electricalengineer.com/