What Tech Is Next for the Solar Industry? | MIT Technology Review
Green says this and other techniques will make it cheap and practical
to replicate the designs of his record solar cell on production lines.
Some companies have developed manufacturing techniques for the front
metal contacts. Implementing the design of the back electrical contacts
is harder, but he expects companies to roll that out next.
Meanwhile,
researchers at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory have made
flexible solar cells on a new type of glass from Corning called Willow
Glass, which is thin and can be rolled up. The type of solar cell they
made is the only current challenger to silicon in terms of large-scale
production—thin-film cadmium telluride (see “First Solar Shines as the Solar Industry Falters”). Flexible solar cells could lower the cost of installing solar cells, making solar power cheaper.
One
of Green’s former students and colleagues, Jianhua Zhao, cofounder of
solar panel manufacturer China Sunergy, announced this week that he is
building a pilot manufacturing line for a two-sided solar cell that can
absorb light from both the front and back. The basic idea, which isn’t
new, is that during some parts of the day, sunlight falls on the land
between rows of solar panels in a solar power plant. That light reflects
onto the back of the panels and could be harvested to increase the
power output. This works particularly well when the solar panels are
built on sand, which is highly reflective. Where a one-sided solar panel
might generate 340 watts, a two-sided one might generate up to 400
watts. He expects the panels to generate 10 to 20 percent more
electricity over the course of a year.
Such solar panels could be
mounted vertically, like a fence, so that one side collects sunlight in
the morning, and the other in the afternoon. That would make it possible
to install the solar panels on very little land—they could serve as
noise barriers along highways, for example. Such an arrangement could
also be valuable in dusty areas. Many parts of the Middle East might
seem to be good places for solar panels, since they get a lot of
sunlight, but frequent dust storms decrease the power output. Vertical
panels wouldn’t accumulate as much dust, which could help make such
systems economical.
Even longer-term, Green is betting on silicon,
aiming to take advantage of the huge reductions in cost already seen
with the technology. He hopes to greatly increase the efficiency of
silicon solar panels by combining silicon with one or two other
semiconductors, each selected to efficiently convert a part of the solar
spectrum that silicon doesn’t convert efficiently. Adding one
semiconductor could boost efficiencies from the 20 to 25 percent range
to around 40 percent. Adding another could make efficiencies as high as
50 percent feasible, which would cut in half the number of solar panels
needed for a given installation. The challenge is to produce good
connections between these semiconductors, something made challenging by
the arrangement of silicon atoms in crystalline silicon.
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