MRS Meetings and Events

 

EL16.12.05 2023 MRS Spring Meeting

Stealthy Hyperuniform Disordered Light Trapping Designs for Solar Applications

When and Where

Apr 13, 2023
5:00pm - 7:00pm

Moscone West, Level 1, Exhibit Hall

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Alexander Lambertz1,Nasim Tavakoli2,Richard Spalding3,Stefan Tabernig2,Marian Florescu3,Jorik Van de Groep4,Esther Alarcon-Llado2

NWO-i AMOLF / UvA Amsterdam1,AMOLF2,University of Surrey3,University of Amsterdam4

Abstract

Alexander Lambertz1,Nasim Tavakoli2,Richard Spalding3,Stefan Tabernig2,Marian Florescu3,Jorik Van de Groep4,Esther Alarcon-Llado2

NWO-i AMOLF / UvA Amsterdam1,AMOLF2,University of Surrey3,University of Amsterdam4
Ultra-thin crystalline silicon solar cells could, in contrast to their thick counterparts, simultaneously reduce levelized cost of electricity by a large factor and be deployed on curved or non-static surfaces, windows, as well as facilitate building integration. Silicon at micron-scale thickness, however, suffers from poor light absorption and conventional light trapping approaches such as random KOH texturing fails due to the feature sizes produced.<br/>We present hyperuniform disordered (HUD) light-trapping structures applied to ultra-thin solar cells via substrate-conformal imprint lithography. This approach enables rapid patterning of large areas (m2) at the nanoscale and can be performed on virtually any substrate and for any type of functional layer, such as the absorber, back-reflector, anti-reflection coating or carrier transporting layers. Correlated-disorder structures were shown to outperform periodic as well as random light trapping approaches [1] and the hyperuniform platform in addition offers tailored scattering to engineer light coupling to guided modes of ultra-thin absorbing layers [2]. To this end, we developed a coupled-mode theory (CMT) approach for estimating absorption with HUD patterns of arbitrary power spectral density distributions, which affords optimizations at low computational effort. CMT predictions are validated by determining the in-coupling rates per guided mods for different HUD designs, which we achieve through FDTD simulations. Furthermore, we show experimentally measured absorption in ultra-thin, free-standing, hyperuniform-patterned silicon slabs of thicknesses ranging from 1-30µm and compare with simulations.<br/>Finally, we show the performance of ultra-thin Si solar cells before and after the application of HUD light trapping structures.<br/>In conclusion, our work exploits stealthy hyperuniformity for exceptional light trapping and aims to further expand the success of earth-abundant silicon to ultra-thin, flexible and semi-transparent PV devices, which can be produced with kerfless bottom-up technologies at significantly reduced capex and accompanying CO2 emissions while maintaining high power conversion efficiencies – A type of device that could literally pave all roads, roofs, walls, and windows by 2050!<br/><br/><b>Publication</b><br/>N. Tavakoli et al., “Over 65% Sunlight Absorption in a 1 μm Si Slab with Hyperuniform Texture”<i>,</i><i> ACS Photonics 2022, 9, 4, 1206–1217</i>, DOI: 10.1021/acsphotonics.1c01668<br/><br/><b>References</b><br/>[1] Bozzola et al. (2014). Broadband light trapping with disordered photonic (..). Prog. Photovolt: Res. Appl., 22, 1237– 1245.<br/>[2] Florescu et al. (2009). Designer disordered materials with large, complete photonic band gaps. PNAS, 106(49), 20658-20663.

Keywords

nanostructure

Symposium Organizers

Yao-Wei Huang, National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
Ho Wai (Howard) Lee, University of California, Irvine
Pin Chieh Wu, National Cheng Kung University
Yang Zhao, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Symposium Support

Bronze
Nanophotonics

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature