July 31, 2007 12:10 PM PDT

A new record in solar cells

by Michael Kanellos
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The University of Delaware has inched up the record for solar cell efficiency with a new device that can convert 42.8 percent of the light that strikes it into electricity.

That beats the old record of 40.7 percent hit in December. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, has been funding research to get efficiency up to 50 percent.

The cell, created by Christina Honsberg and Allan Barnett of UD, splits incoming light into three buckets: high energy, low energy, and medium energy light. The light is then directed to different materials, which then extract electrons out of the photons that make up sunlight.

The device also has an optical concentrator, sort of like a lens that directs more sunlight to the solar cell than would occur naturally and thereby increasing efficiency.

Various materials (silicon, germanium, etc.) react differently to different parts of the solar spectrum. Crystalline solar cells, for instance, can currently convert 22 percent of light into electricity (without concentrators). The theoretical maximum is 29 percent sans concentration. Combining different materials into multi-junction cells or adding concentrators helps get around the limitations of the materials.

Multi-junction solar cells and concentrators, however, are expensive. The initial customers for devices like this will be the military. Possible applications include portable charging packs for soldiers.

Concentrators can often add girth to solar cells, but the UD device is a little less than a centimeter thick.

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Good on them!
by Hoser McMoose July 31, 2007 1:39 PM PDT
Well done to the UD researchers on this one, developments in this field are very important. One of the key things that keeps photo voltaic cells from really reaching their potential.

Unfortunately the key thing is not so much in reaching this new, higher level of efficiency, but rather taking the knowledge learned from such a design and applying it in a useful and economical package for widespread production. Right now the very best (and most expensive) solar cells are only about 22% efficient, and most are more like 15-18%. Given that the amount of solar energy hitting a given chunk of the earth is fixed, the only way to increase the energy out of the system is to up the efficiency.
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Watts per Dollar
by SiXiam July 31, 2007 7:58 PM PDT
42.7% or 50% or 20%

It's all about the money...
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Fallacy in your statement
by MinoMK August 1, 2007 10:35 AM PDT
This being a tech news site I can't believe no one so the fallacy of the statement "The light is then directed to different materials, which then extract electrons out of the photons that make up sunlight."

You don't extract the electrons out of the photons, it's impossible to do so. Photons are elementary particles just like electrons, but have zero mass. You use the energy of the photons to extract electrons out of the semiconductors they use. By bombarding the material with photons, you increase the energy level of the electrons and thus make them break out of their bond with the atom.
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by pn0853 July 5, 2008 11:05 AM PDT
Haha, I was thinking the same thing! When I read that comment, I was like, "wow, and I'm suppose to believe anything this article has to say now."
by vidya12 April 3, 2009 12:17 AM PDT
Using solar power directly to heat air or water is the most efficient way to do it. Solar electric is not a very efficient way to heat things, but solar thermal works great! We don't have a huge amount of information here about solar thermal,
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