The invention relates to the field of solar cells, and in particular using micro photonic crystals in a solar cell design to significantly enhance the absorption efficiency over certain frequencies.
Sunlight has long been recognized as a long-lasting, low-impact and clean energy source. To capture the energy in sunlight, semiconductor solar cells have been designed to convert photons with energy greater than or equal to the semiconductor bandgap energy into electricity. One of the most widely used solar cell material is crystalline silicon (Si), whose bandgap at room temperature correspond to photons with wavelength λ=1.1 μm and is useful for a large portion of the solar spectrum. However, due to the indirect bandgap of Si, its absorption is strong only when the incident wavelength is well below λG, and becomes fairly weak for long wavelengths, with an absorption length of over 10 μm for X=0.8 μm and an absorption length over 1 mm for λ=1.1 μm, as shown in
As a result of this property of Si, a 10 μm-thick Si micro solar cell will primarily absorb wavelengths λ=0.8 μm and below, while wavelengths between 0.8 μm and 1.1 μm (=λG) are mostly lost to reflection. It would certainly be very desirable to improve the design of these Si micro solar cells so that they can not only use less Si material but also remain an effective absorber for all the photons with energies greater than the Si bandgap.
According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided a solar cell. The solar cell includes a photovoltaic material region. The photovoltaic material region is covered by a uniform anti-reflection coating. A photonic crystal structure is positioned on the photovoltaic material region. The photonic crystal structure provides a medium to produce a plurality of spatial orientations of an incident light signal received by the solar cell so as to allow trapping of a selective frequency of incident light in the solar cell.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of forming a solar cell. The method includes a photovoltaic material region, and forming a uniform anti-reflection coating on top. Also, the method includes forming a photonic crystal structure that is positioned on the photovoltaic material region. The photonic crystal structure provides a medium to produce a plurality of spatial orientations of an incident light signal received by the solar cell so as to allow trapping of a selective frequency of incident light in the solar cell.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a solar cell. The solar cell includes a photovoltaic material region. The photovoltaic material region has a planar top surface, and a uniform anti-reflection coating is positioned on top of the photovoltaic material region. A photonic crystal structure surrounds a portion of the photovoltaic material region. The photonic crystal structure provides a medium to produce a plurality of spatial orientations of an incident light signal received by the solar cell so as to allow trapping of a selective frequency of incident light in the solar cell.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of forming a solar cell. The method includes providing a photovoltaic material region with a planar top surface, and forming a uniform anti-reflection coating which is positioned on top of the photovoltaic material region. Also, the method includes forming a photonic crystal structure surrounding a portion of the photovoltaic material region. The photonic crystal structure provides a medium to produce a plurality of spatial orientations of an incident light signal received by the solar cell so as to allow trapping of a selective frequency of incident light in the solar cell.
The invention introduces micro photonic crystals into a solar cell design. One can show that there exist several new mechanisms in the photonic-crystal based solar cell designs which can significantly enhance the absorption efficiency over certain wavelengths. This range of wavelengths can then be designed to be near λG to capture photons that have thus far been neglected in conventional thin-film solar cells made of indirect bandgap semiconductors, e.g., silicon.
The key in improving the absorption efficiency of a photovoltaic material layer lies in methods to increase the light path length inside the layer. For simplicity, the interface with air is temporarily ignored; light propagation is considered within the photovoltaic cell only.
The situation changes if one introduces an “air-hole” type photonic crystal structure 10 in the photovoltaic material 12 above the bottom DBR 14, as depicted in
For the reflected beams, due to the surface periodicity, the direction of propagation can now be in all the diffraction directions that have wavevectors differing from the usual spectral-reflection wavevector by a reciprocal lattice vector. Thus it is possible to change the propagation angles in the photovoltaic material region by exploiting the diffracted reflection beams. For example, a portion of energy in the beam of small incident θ can be diverted into beams of large reflected θ′, which is then absorbed more effectively. Furthermore, if the interface with air is now considered, it is evident that sufficiently oblique angles will lead to total internal reflection, which traps light very strongly. A model for the orientation of the diffracted beams can be constructed, which shows that frequencies within a range from cG/n to cG, which are diffracted, should subsequently be internally reflected, where c is the speed of light, G is the reciprocal lattice vector, and n is the refractive index of the photovoltaic material. For a high index (e.g., n=3.5 in Si in near-infrared), this is a sufficiently large range to internally reflect the entire range of target wavelengths (0.7 μm to 1.1 μm in Si), provided enough resonances are present. However, clearly for a solar cell with a small number of resonances in this range, because of a very low absorption coefficient or a very thin layer of material, leakage back into air at the intermediate frequencies will limit the performance of this device.
For the refracted beams, large angles of refraction can also occur for certain angles of incidence, for example, in the superprism effect. The refracted angle into the photonic crystal can be found by first calculating the constant-frequency contours of the photonic crystal, then choosing the mode(s) that conserve both frequency and the parallel component of the wavevector (up to a reciprocal lattice vector). The condition for large propagation angles is that gradient vectors generated from the constant-frequency surfaces, which represent the direction of the group velocity, make a large angle with the surface normal. In practical designs, the DBR reflects back all the refracted photonic crystal modes. The light in these modes ultimately gets absorbed or re-enters the photovoltaic material. The final propagation directions are thus only those determined from surface diffraction, though the strength of each diffracted beams depends on its coupling to the corresponding photonic crystal mode. The presence of the DBR also means that the photonic crystal region is finite and can therefore admit resonances. These resonances are also beneficial for light absorption because light can also bounce back and forth inside the photonic crystal and become gradually absorbed. Furthermore, these resonances are especially important for the photonic-crystal modes with large angles of refraction. As has been shown in previous work, these super-refracted modes would be difficult to couple to without resonances. On the other hand, one can expect that on resonances these super-refracted modes are absorbed well because they have difficulty escaping the photonic crystal layer. In summary, a photonic-crystal based photovoltaic cell can have anomalous reflection and refraction properties, including total internal reflection, and can also form photonic crystal resonances for incident light, all of which can be used to improve the absorption efficiency of a thin photovoltaic cell.
In order to illustrate the enhancement of absorption efficiency for photonic-crystal based designs, S-matrix calculations are performed on a simple 2D system: a photovoltaic material layer, 104 thick in total, with 3 periods of a square lattice air-columns of (10) surface termination at the bottom. The lattice period α is then taken to be α=0.254 and the column radius is chosen to be 0.4α. For simplicity, perfect metal is used in place of the DBR, the dielectric constant of the photovoltaic material layer is taken to be a constant ε=12+0.0033i, the light is assumed to come from either the same photovoltaic material region or air above it, and is polarized perpendicular to the column axis, corresponding to TE modes. This ε corresponds to an absorption length of 167 λ0 at wavelength which λ0 absorbs 11% of light with only a reflector (but no photonic crystal) present.
Both normal incidence and incidence at an angle on the system are considered, and two kinds of reflection coefficients are calculated to measure the strength of absorption, as shown in
For the normal incidence case,
The case of incidence at an angle is numerically implemented as a transverse wavevector 0.4·2π/α in the S-matrix calculation. In this case, the diffraction threshold frequency is much lower, and more drastic behavior can be seen in the spectral reflections. For example, the spectral component can go to less than 7% at ω=0.331·2π/α. The major portion of the energy at this frequency is negatively-reflected at an angle of around 30° for an incidence angle of 20°. Also, note that a sharp dip occurs in
For simplicity many of the reflection properties of a 2D photonic-crystal based absorptive layer have been considered for the case when the incident medium is the same as the photovoltaic material (except for the last curve in both
On the other hand, the photonic-crystal based solar cells trap light using a different principle, which is capable of greatly exceeding this limit for some frequencies. In the planar air/anti-reflection coating/Si case, possible solar cell designs using the reduced spectral reflection are shown in
In practical designs, 3D photonic crystals can be used to achieve changes of propagation angle on all incident directions and polarizations. In order to make use of the resonances, a complete photonic bandgap is not desired. Consequently, relatively simple structures, such as a simple cubic lattice with (100) surface termination, are sufficient for this application. The frequency range should be chosen so that at least one mode can be excited, for example by incident angles of 0°-30° in the high-dielectric material.
Moreover, the photonic crystal should possess sections of flat constant-frequency contours perpendicular to the surface. The band structure as well as the constant-frequency contours of a simple-cubic lattice of air spheres of radius 0.48α in Si have been calculated, and found that frequency regions (0.25-0.30)·2πc/α corresponding to the third, fourth and fifth bands and are sufficient for these criteria. For use at the Si bandgap 1 μm, the inventive design has a lattice constant α of roughly 250-300 nm, and is within the reach of current electron-beam or X-ray lithography.
Although the present invention has been shown and described with respect to several preferred embodiments thereof, various changes, omissions and additions to the form and detail thereof, may be made therein, without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.