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team led by Wladek Walukiewicz, working with researchers at Cornell University,
and Ritsumeikan University, Japan, has discovered that, contrary to earlier
reports, the band gaps of the In1-xGaxN ternary alloy system extend over
a very wide energy range (0.7 eV to 3.4 eV) and thus provide a near-perfect
match to the solar energy spectrum. This creates the opportunity to design
and fabricate new multijunction solar cells that will have greatly improved
efficiencies, possibly reaching the theoretically predicted ultimate efficiencies.
A team led by Wladek
Walukiewicz, working with researchers at Cornell University, and Ritsumeikan
University, Japan, has discovered that, contrary to earlier reports, the
band gaps of the In1-xGaxN ternary alloy system extend over a very wide
energy range (0.7 eV to 3.4 eV) and thus provide a near-perfect match to
the solar energy spectrum. This creates the opportunity to design and fabricate
new multijunction solar cells that will have greatly improved efficiencies,
possibly reaching the theoretically predicted ultimate efficiencies.
The power conversion efficiency limit for a solar cell based on a single
semiconducting material is 31%. The primary reason for this limit is that
no one material can perfectly match the broad range of solar radiation,
which has usable energy in the photon range of 0.4 – 4 eV (see figure).
Light with energy below the bandgap of the semiconductor will not be absorbed
and thus not be converted. Light with energy above the bandgap will be absorbed,
but the excess energy above the bandgap will be lost in the form of heat.
Decades of research in developing single-material solar cells has led to
cell efficiencies close to the theoretical limit; the best cell of this
type has an efficiency of 25.1%.
It was realized quite early that still higher efficiencies could be achieved
by using stacks of semiconductors with different band gaps. In this design,
the higher gap materials convert higher energy photons, but do not absorb
lower energy photons which then pass through to the lower |

gap materials. Maximum, theoretically predicted efficiencies increase
to 50%, 56%, and 72% for stacks of 2, 3, and 36 junctions with appropriately
optimized energy gaps, respectively. Indeed, tandem solar cells with as
many as three semiconductors have been developed over the last decade
and such cells currently have the highest efficiency achieved; about 30%.
A major challenge in achieving widespread use of these multijunction solar
cells lies in the identification of materials with the appropriate bandgaps.
The 50% efficient 2 junction cell requires an upper cell bandgap of 1.7
eV and a lower cell gap of 1.1 eV. The two-layer tandem cells grown to
date are less efficient, using the best available 1.85/1.43 eV band gap
combination that takes advantage of the lattice match of Ga0.5In0.5P and
GaAs. Fabrication of 1.7/1.1 eV band gap cells would be simplified if
two materials in a single ternary alloy system could be used, but it was
believed that there was no suitable system with direct bandgaps in this
optimal range.
Working with crystal growers from Cornell and Ritsumeikan University,
Japan, the LBNL team performed optical tests (absorption and “photoluminescence”)
on a wide range of extremely high quality InN and InxGa1-xN films grown
under carefully controlled conditions. It was found that the direct band
gap of pure InN is 0.7 eV rather than the previously reported 2.0 eV,
which had been measured in lower quality material. Furthermore, it was
shown that alloying the InN with GaN to form InxGa1-xN can produce materials
whose bandgaps can be continuously varied from 0.7 eV to 3.4 eV. This
single semiconductor alloy system, therefore, has an almost perfect match
to the entire solar spectrum. Not only does this range include the optimal
bandgap values (1.1 and 1.7 eV) for a two-layer cell, it will also enable
the fabrication of optimized tandem cells with more layers, for which
materials whose band gaps extend close to the lower and nearly all the
way to the upper bounds of the usable region of the solar spectrum are
required. More recent work has shown that the InxAl1-xN system has direct
band gaps spanning an even wider energy range: from 0.7 – 6.2 eV;
thus, this related materials system may be useful for both solar energy
conversion and for other optoelectronic applications in the near-IR to
deep ultraviolet regions of the spectrum
Although grown on lattice mismatched substrates, all the InxGa1-xN films
show an exceptionally strong and robust photoluminescence, demonstrating
insensitivity of the optoelectronic properties to structural imperfections.
This observation bodes very well for applications of these materials in
environmentally harsh conditions. To fully implement the InxGa1-xN alloys
for photovoltaic applications some additional hurdles such as control
of p-type doping must be overcome, however the work demonstrates that
III-V nitride alloys are promising candidates for the development of new
solar cells with efficiencies as high as 50%. Furthermore, the discovery
extends the range of potential optoelectronic applications of III-V nitride
alloys from the near infrared to the deep ultraviolet spectral regions.
Wladek
Walukiewicz, (510) 486-5329, Materials Sciences Division (510 486-4755),
Berkeley Lab.
J. Wu,
W. Walukiewicz, K. M. Yu, J. W. Ager III, E. E. Haller, H. Lu, W. J. Schaff,
Y. Saito, and Y. Nanishi, “Unusual properties of the fundamental
band gap of InN,” Appl. Phys Lett. 80, 3967-3969 (2002). |