1. Field of the Invention
Embodiments of the present invention are directed to the field of optical waveguide technology that optically confines photons of luminescence generated in a luminescent substrate and guides propagation of the light without significant optical loss. The present invention is directed to a luminescent waveguide device, and methods of making thereof, that may be used to convert solar energy into electricity.
2. Description of the Related Art
Solar cells are very important to the solar electric energy generation using PV technology in terms of conversion efficiency and cost-effectiveness. The cost of solar cells currently constitutes about 50% of the total system cost. Approaches to bring down the cost have been primarily focused on two fronts: the first is to reduce the cost of solar cells using new fabrication technology and large scale production. The second is to decrease the usage of expensive solar cells by concentrating as much sunlight as possible to small-area high-efficiency cells.
Conventional methods using lenses and parabolic mirrors have been widely used to concentrate sunlight. However, concentrators employing geometric optic components work only under direct sunlight and require tracking of the sun and excellent heat dissipation. These disadvantages may be overcome using luminescent concentrator (LC) that consists basically of a set of transparent plates embedded with particles of luminescent materials. The incident broad-band sunlight will be absorbed in these plates and re-emitted as narrow-band luminescence isotropically in all directions. The transparent plates of higher refractive index acting as waveguide collectors trap a large portion of re-emitted light that strikes at the surface of the plate with an incident angle larger than the critical angle for total internal reflection defined by Snell's law, and ensure the collection of the trapped light piping down from one point to another undergoing the internal reflection to the edges of the plates in the underlying solar cells (J. Javetski, Electronics, 52, 105 (1979); H. J. Hovel et al., Solar Energy Materials, 2, 19 (1979); U.S. Pat. No. 4,227,939 to A. H. Zewail et al).
The concept of LC for solar energy conversion was introduced in the 1970s. In the earlier version of these concentrators, organic dye molecules dispersed and doped in a transparent glass or plastic substrate with its refractive index larger than air were used to absorb short-wavelength photons of incident sunlight and re-emit them at longer wavelengths, i.e. frequency down conversion, where the solar cells have better spectral response in terms of quantum efficiency, therefore higher energy conversion efficiency can be achieved. Later, the idea was expanded to use inorganic semiconductor quantum dots (U.S. Pat. No. 6,476,3120 to K. W. J. Bamham, and references therein) and nanostructured composite materials (US Patent Application Publication No. US2004/0095658 to M. Buretea et al.) as luminescent materials. Compared to the other types of solar concentrators, LC has several advantages that include: (i) no need for tracking of sun movement is required because the luminescent materials absorb incident light at any angle; (ii) much lower heating generated in the edge-mounted solar cells because the heat from the excess energy of the short-wavelength photons is dissipated over the entire area of the concentrator; (iii) functional under both direct and diffuse sunlight conditions, and (iv) easily scaled-up concentration factor by increasing the area of the collector over its given thickness.
For LC, a fraction of re-emitted luminescence, which depends on the refractive indexes of the collector (n1) and the surrounding medium (n0) and given by equation (1)
escapes out of the transparent substrate when the re-emitted photons fall into an escape cone, as illustrated in
The expected high efficiency of LC in practice has not been reached for various reasons. In the organic dye situation, because absorption and emission spectrum of a dye is very close to each other, and absorption spectrum does not cover enough useful solar spectrum, several dyes have to be used in a cascading fashion (i.e. a second dye absorbing the emission of the first dye and so on) to convert most of the useful solar energy spectrum to a lower energy spectrum. In each step of the cascade, a fraction of energy is lost, multiple cascading steps quickly lose most of the energy. In the inorganic doped-glass situation, to maintain the transparency of the doped glass, i.e. keep a single phase material, very small amounts of luminescent dopant can be added, resulting very low quantum efficiency. If large amounts of luminescent dopant is added, the resulting material contains two phases (one of the glass and one of the luminescent material). This two phase material is opaque and scatters the emitted light.
Embodiments of present invention are directed to extracting and waveguiding luminescence generated in a medium so as to improve luminescent concentrator performance. By placing a high-efficiency transmission diffractive optic component and/or glass plate(s) on top of luminescent plates to redirect the re-emitted photons with angles relative to surface normal falling into the escape zone to much larger angles so these otherwise outgoing photons can be waveguided by total internal reflection within the glass plate and to the side edges, therefore minimizing the critical-angle loss and increasing the output light intensity at the edges.
FIG. (2) is schematic illustration of preferred luminescent spectrum.
FIG. (3) is a schematic showing the composition of a multi-phase luminescent substrate;
FIG. (4) is a schematic showing an exemplary symmetrical configuration of a luminescence waveguide with diffractive optics on a glass plate (positioned as diffraction optics in adjacent to luminescent plate and glass plate adjacent to air) installed directly over the luminescent substrate to capture all luminescent light escaping from the top of the luminescent plate with escaping cone angle.
FIG. (5) is a schematic illustration of placing a glass plate with an index of refraction greater than that of the luminescent plate on luminescent substrate to reduce the angle of escape cone of the luminescent plate;
FIG. (6) is a schematic showing an exemplary symmetrical configuration of a luminescence waveguide with diffractive optics (transmission VGB) and cover glass sheet installed;
FIG. (7) is a diagram showing that when a symmetrical waveguide used to confine photons emitted by luminescent particles embedded in the luminescence substrate within device, then the rays of luminescence may be piped down to the end edges of the waveguide;
FIG. (8) is a schematic showing an exemplary asymmetrical configuration of a luminescence waveguide with diffractive optics (transmission VGB) and cover glass sheet installed;
FIG. (9) is a diagram showing that when a symmetrical waveguide used to confine photons emitted by luminescent particles embedded in the luminescence substrate within device, then the rays of luminescence may be piped down to one end edge of the waveguide;
The foregoing background and summary, as well as the following detailed description of the drawings, will be better understood when read in conjunction with the appended drawings. For the purpose of illustrating the invention, there is shown in the drawings embodiments which are presently preferred. It should be understood, however, that the invention is not limited to the precise arrangements and instrumentalities shown. Throughout the drawings, like reference numerals refer to like elements. The terms “top” and “bottom” are used to distinguish between the different surfaces or covers. The use of the terms does not mean that the apparatus will always be oriented with the “top” surface or cover above the “bottom” surface or cover. Either position is considered to be within the scope of the invention.
To overcome the above-mentioned deficiencies, an alternative luminescent plate designs are proposed in this invention. First, high efficiency inorganic luminescent materials with its absorption and emission spectrum well separated may be used. The luminescent material should be such that its absorption spectrum covers a large portion of useful solar spectrum, and its emission spectrum is located at near and below the upper absorption edge of the photovoltaic semiconductor cell, and at a region with relatively high efficiency and well separated from the absorption spectrum (
To ensure the luminescent plate efficiency, a multi-phase approach can be adopted. High concentration of one or more luminescent materials can be mixed with and uniformly dispersed in matrix of non-absorbing (in relevant absorbing and emission spectra) tpolymer, plastic material or other materials. This multi-phase luminescent substrate is depicted in
Such a two phase or multiple phase medium is a scattering medium. The scattering of irradiance illuminated on it depends on the size, shape, composition, or orientation of the embedded particles. Luminescence generated in such a medium suffers a great deal of scattering en route to reach the ends or edges of the substrate. The portion of luminescence generated by one particular particle and optically confined in the plate by total internal reflection is subjected to scattering by the other particles while propagating in a plate toward the edges. For a N multiple scattering process the internally trapped portion become [1−f]N, and as a result, most luminescent light will escape from the top surface within escape cone and very little is trapped internally and guided to the edge end. The performance of an LC can be impaired severely by multiple scattering processes that prevent the luminescence from transmitting to the edges. For these reasons, it is extremely important to find a methods to address the effects of multiple scattering process.
First, the effect of scattering can be significantly reduced if the matrix material can be made to have its refractive index match closely to that of the luminescent particles. Here, the luminescent material(s) (74) and the matrix (72) are selected so that their refractive indexes (n1b and n1a) are approximately the same, within 20% of each other, preferably within 10%, more preferably within 1%. The closer the refractive indexes are matched the lower the scattering effect. It is desirable to eliminate as much of the scattering effect as possible to ensure efficient transmission of the transmission of the luminescence to the edges of the substrate; therefore, it is most preferred to have n1b=n1a. This substrate, where the refractive indexes of the matrix (72) and the luminescent material(s) are approximately the same, will appear as transparent, can be used alone as a LC, or be used with the multi-layer apparatuses and structures disclosed below.
Secondly, if the refractive indexes of the matrix (72) and the luminescent material(s) are not matched, the plate will appear as translucent or non-transparent, most luminescent light will escape from the top surface of the plate within the escape cone. The waveguide apparatuses and structures disclosed henceforth can be used to efficiently re-direct and guide the light to the ends or edges of a waveguide. These waveguide apparatuses and structures are designed to internally reflect as much re-emitted light as possible and to conduct the re-emitted to the ends or edges of the waveguide.
Referring to
θc1=sin−1(n1/n2), (2)
will enter the cover plates. If multiple scattering occurs, most light will escape within this cone angle. As shown in
In certain embodiments, diffractive optics (34) may be mounted on the surfaces of the top and/or bottom plates (26), as illustrated by
The diffractive optic (34) is preferably a transmission diffraction grating which is a collection of reflecting elements that are separated by a distance comparable to the wavelengths of interest (grating constant). The elements can be a periodic thickness variation (surface relief) of a transparent material or a periodic refractive-index variation (volume) within a flat film formed along one dimension. When the thickness of a grating significantly exceeds the fundamental fringe period recorded in it, the grating is said to operate in the Bragg diffraction regime and is called a volume Bragg grating (VBG). The extended volume of its medium serves to suppress (or “filter out”) all but the first diffraction order in reconstruction; therefore, the efficiency is very high. VBG may be holographically made using two unit amplitude plane waves of common wavelength that are incident on a photosensitive medium making angles with the surface normal. The arrangement of incidence on the same side of the photosensitive medium records a transmission hologram, whereas incidence from opposite sides of the medium forms a reflection hologram. Since the angles of incidence and diffraction, central wavelength, and spectral, as well as angular widths, of a VBG can be properly chosen by varying the grating thickness, period of refractive index modulation, and grating vector orientation, it is considered a very useful angular as well as spectral selector. In addition, the selectivity property of a VBG endowed by the physics of volume diffraction can be exploited to multiplex a number of holograms that are stored within the same physical volume and then diffract lights incident from different angles independently, thus greatly enhancing the overall capabilities of the volume grating to accept lights incident from a wide range of angles within a given spectral breadth and diffract them to the same location.
A transmission VBG may be made by recording several holograms angularly multiplexed within the same physical volume of the grating, and may be readily integrated into a luminescence waveguide with their spectral bandwidth matching to the re-emission of the luminescent particles.
Referring to
In another embodiment, the diffractive optic (34) and protective glass cover (32) can replace the cover plates (26), as illustrated in
In another embodiment, an asymmetrical configuration of luminescence waveguide may be used. Referring
A scheme to minimize this undesirable effect of the asymmetrical device structure is to waveguide the re-emitted photon toward just one end of the waveguide (for example, in direction A) by mirror coating the less-illuminated edge (for example, the edge toward direction B) of the waveguide, as illustrated in
Although the asymmetrical device has been shown in
The multi-layer apparatuses and configurations disclosed herein can be realized for transparent or non-transparent, organic (containing organic dyes) or inorganic (containing inorganic luminescent particles), single phase or multi-phase luminescent substrate to form a highly effective LCs.
Although certain embodiments and preferred embodiments of the invention have been specifically described herein, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art to which the invention pertains that variations and modifications of the various embodiments shown and described herein may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention be limited only to the extent required by the appended claims and the applicable rules of law.
This application claims the priority of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/934,872, filed Jun. 18, 2007.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60934872 | Jun 2007 | US |