101. Dark-currrent suppression due to photon recycling in distributed Bragg reflector strain-balanced quantum well solar cells
- Author
-
D.B. Bushnell, A. Bessiere, L.M. Ballard, G. Hill, C. Calder, James P. Connolly, D.C. Johnson, J.S. Roberts, Keith W. J. Barnham, Blackett Laboratory, Imperial College London, Institut Photovoltaïque d’Ile-de-France (ITE) (IPVF), Division of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences, Glasgow Royal Infirmary, UK, and Glasgow Royal Infirmary
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Physics ,[PHYS]Physics [physics] ,business.industry ,02 engineering and technology ,Electroluminescence ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Distributed Bragg reflector ,7. Clean energy ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,[PHYS.QPHY]Physics [physics]/Quantum Physics [quant-ph] ,Saturation current ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,Solar cell ,Optoelectronics ,Spontaneous emission ,[PHYS.COND]Physics [physics]/Condensed Matter [cond-mat] ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Quantum well ,Recombination ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,Dark current - Abstract
Self-absorption or photon recycling (PR) has been observed experimentally as a reduction in the ideality n=1 reverse saturation current of SB-QWSCs. We believe this is the first example of PR effects on solar cell dark-currents. PR is observed at high bias when the primary recombination mechanism in SB-QWSCs is radiative recombination in the quantum wells corresponding to ideality n=1 dark-currents. Results are presented here on the effect of PR on the dark-current and electroluminescence (EL) spectrum; PR has resulted in DBR SB-QWSC dark-current and EL suppression of up to 35% both experimentally and theoretically. Comparison is made to control cells without a DBR. Modelling results will allow us to make predictions for expected efficiency enhancement in optimised SB-QWSC devices at high concentration levels. These results convincingly reveal how PR can increase the efficiency of SB-QWSCs.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF