Lite Version|Standard version

To gain access to this content please
Log in with your free Royal Society of Chemistry publishing personal account.
Log in via your home Institution.
Log in with your member or subscriber username and password.
Download

This paper considers a range of techniques which – within the realm of classical optics – can be used to enhance light capture as a first step in photovoltaic energy conversion. Examples include a simple case of downshifting, fluorescent collectors which reduce the size of a light beam, and a novel form of light trapping to increase the path length of light within the solar cell. The results are discussed using a thermodynamic framework where the energy exchange with an absorbing/fluorescent medium allows the entropy of the captured photon gas to be lowered, reducing the étendue of the emitted beam. We show that frequency management represents a powerful tool, allowing enhancement in light trapping above the Yablononovitch limit, leading to potentially highly efficient but very thin crystalline silicon solar cells.

Graphical abstract: Photon frequency management for trapping & concentration of sunlight

Page: ^ Top