Solar Cell Power Breakthrough
From: University of Copenhagen - Niels Bohr
Institute, via EurekAlert
Scientists from the
Nano-Science Center at the Niels Bohr Institut, Denmark and the Ecole
Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland, have shown that a single
nanowire can concentrate the sunlight up to 15 times of the normal sun light
intensity. The results are surprising and the potential for developing a new
type of highly efficient solar cells is great.
Due to some unique
physical light absorption properties of nanowires, the limit of how much energy
we can utilize from the sun's rays is higher than previous believed. These
results demonstrate the great potential of development of nanowire-based solar
cells, says PhD Peter Krogstrup on the surprising discovery that is described
in the journal Nature Photonics.
The research groups have during recent years studied how to develop and improve the quality of the nanowire crystals, which is a cylindrical structure with a diameter of about 10,000 part of a human hair. The nanowires are predicted to have great potential in the development not only of solar cells, but also of future quantum computers and other electronic products.
It turns out that the
nanowires naturally concentrate the sun's rays into a very small area in the
crystal by up to a factor 15. Because the diameter of a nanowire crystal is
smaller than the wavelength of the light coming from the sun it can cause
resonances in the intensity of light in and around nanowires.
Thus, the
resonances can give a concentrated sunlight, where the energy is converted,
which can be used to give a higher conversion efficiency of the sun's energy,
says Peter Krogstrup, who with this discovery contributes to that the research
in solar cell technology based on nanowires get a real boost.
Read more at EurekAlert.