MRS Meetings and Events

 

EN02.06.05 2022 MRS Spring Meeting

Record Efficiency Multijunction Solar Cells with Strain-Balanced Quantum Well Superlattices

When and Where

May 10, 2022
3:15pm - 3:45pm

Hawai'i Convention Center, Level 3, 321B

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Myles Steiner1,Ryan France1

NREL1

Abstract

Myles Steiner1,Ryan France1

NREL1
The absorption edge of a GaAs solar cell can be tuned to longer wavelengths with strain-balanced quantum wells, as an alternative to metamorphic epitaxy. For one-sun photovoltaic applications, an optimum bandgap for both single and multijunction solar cells is near the broad water absorption peak at 930 nm and can be accessed by a Ga<sub>0.9</sub>In<sub>0.1</sub>As alloy. This alloy is strained with respect to the GaAs substrate, and so only very thin ~10 nm layers can be grown without relaxation via dislocation formation. However, solar cells require significant thickness for complete absorption of the incoming solar spectrum, requiring many such layers. We have designed quantum well superlattices with up to 300 sets of carefully tuned strain-balanced GaInAs/GaAsP pairs by limiting composition modulation and material degradation. We have incorporated quantum well solar cells into multijunction devices to achieve record 32.9% two-junction and 39.5% three-junction solar cells under standard one-sun illumination. We will describe the physics of the quantum well devices and the growth conditions that lead to sharp interfaces and good material quality, as well as the characterization of the efficiencies.

Keywords

III-V | vapor phase epitaxy (VPE)

Symposium Organizers

Vijay Parameshwaran, U.S. Army Research Laboratory
Esther Alarcon-Llado, AMOLF
Todd Deutsch, National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Shu Hu, Yale University

Symposium Support

Bronze
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Yale Energy Science Institute

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature