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Solar
Power Game-Changer: “Near Perfect” Absorption of
Sunlight, From All Angles
Monday, November 3, 2008
A
new antireflective coating developed by researchers at
Rensselaer could help to overcome two major hurdles blocking
the progress and wider use of solar power. The
nanoengineered coating, pictured here, boosts the amount of
sunlight captured by solar panels and allows those panels to
absorb the entire spectrum of sunlight from any angle,
regardless of the sun’s position in the sky.
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Credit:
Rensselaer/Shawn Lin
Researchers at Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute have discovered and demonstrated a new
method for overcoming two major hurdles facing solar energy. By
developing a new antireflective coating that boosts the amount of
sunlight captured by solar panels and allows those panels to
absorb the entire solar spectrum from nearly any angle, the
research team has moved academia and industry closer to realizing
high-efficiency, cost-effective solar power.
“To get maximum
efficiency when converting solar power into electricity, you want
a solar panel that can absorb nearly every single photon of
light, regardless of the sun’s position in the sky,”
said Shawn-Yu Lin, professor of physics at Rensselaer and a
member of the university’s Future Chips Constellation, who
led the research project. “Our new antireflective
coating makes this possible.”
Results of the year-long
project are explained in the paper “Realization of a Near
Perfect Antireflection Coating for Silicon Solar Energy,”
published this week by the journal Optics
Letters.
An untreated silicon solar cell
only absorbs 67.4 percent of sunlight shone upon it —
meaning that nearly one-third of that sunlight is reflected away
and thus unharvestable. From an economic and efficiency
perspective, this unharvested light is wasted potential and a
major barrier hampering the proliferation and widespread adoption
of solar power.
After a silicon surface was
treated with Lin’s new nanoengineered reflective coating,
however, the material absorbed 96.21 percent of sunlight shone
upon it — meaning that only 3.79 percent of the sunlight
was reflected and unharvested. This huge gain in absorption was
consistent across the entire spectrum of sunlight, from UV to
visible light and infrared, and moves solar power a significant
step forward toward economic viability.
Lin’s new coating also
successfully tackles the tricky challenge of angles.
Most surfaces and coatings are
designed to absorb light — i.e., be antireflective —
and transmit light — i.e., allow the light to pass through
it — from a specific range of angles. Eyeglass lenses, for
example, will absorb and transmit quite a bit of light from a
light source directly in front of them, but those same lenses
would absorb and transmit considerably less light if the light
source were off to the side or on the wearer’s periphery.
This same is true of
conventional solar panels, which is why some industrial solar
arrays are mechanized to slowly move throughout the day so their
panels are perfectly aligned with the sun’s position in the
sky. Without this automated movement, the panels would not be
optimally positioned and would therefore absorb less sunlight.
The tradeoff for this increased efficiency, however, is the
energy needed to power the automation system, the cost of
upkeeping this system, and the possibility of errors or
misalignment.
Lin’s discovery could
antiquate these automated solar arrays, as his antireflective
coating absorbs sunlight evenly and equally from all angles. This
means that a stationary solar panel treated with the coating
would absorb 96.21 percent of sunlight no matter the position of
the sun in the sky. So along with significantly better absorption
of sunlight, Lin’s discovery could also enable a new
generation of stationary, more cost-efficient solar arrays.
“At the beginning of the
project, we asked ‘would it be possible to create a single
antireflective structure that can work from all angles?’
Then we attacked the problem from a fundamental perspective,
tested and fine-tuned our theory, and created a working device,”
Lin said. Rensselaer physics graduate student Mei-Ling Kuo played
a key role in the investigations.
Typical antireflective coatings
are engineered to transmit light of one particular wavelength.
Lin’s new coating stacks seven of these layers, one on top
of the other, in such a way that each layer enhances the
antireflective properties of the layer below it. These additional
layers also help to “bend” the flow of sunlight to an
angle that augments the coating’s antireflective
properties. This means that each layer not only transmits
sunlight, it also helps to capture any light that may have
otherwise been reflected off of the layers below it.
The seven layers, each with a
height of 50 nanometers to 100 nanometers, are made up of A
Random page in Scientific Frontline silicon dioxide and titanium
dioxide nanorods positioned at an oblique angle — each
layer looks and functions similar to a dense forest where
sunlight is “captured” between the trees. The
nanorods were attached to a silicon substrate via chemical vapor
disposition, and Lin said the new coating can be affixed to
nearly any photovoltaic materials for use in solar cells,
including III-V multi-junction and cadmium telluride.
Along with Lin and Kuo,
co-authors of the paper include E. Fred Schubert, Wellfleet
Senior Constellation Professor of Future Chips at Rensselaer;
Research Assistant Professor Jong Kyu Kim; physics graduate
student David Poxson; and electrical engineering graduate student
Frank Mont.
Funding for the project was
provided by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Basic
Energy Sciences, as well as the U.S. Air Force Office of
Scientific Research.
Source:
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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