Thin, flexible, and invisible solar cells will be a ubiquitous technology in the near future. Ultrathin crystalline silicon (c-Si) cells capitalize on the success of bulk silicon cells while being lightweight and mechanically flexible, but suffer from poor absorption and efficiency. Here we present a new family of surface texturing, based on correlated disordered hyperuniform patterns, capable of efficiently coupling the incident spectrum into the silicon slab optical modes. We experimentally demonstrate 66.5% solar light absorption in free-standing 1 μm c-Si layers by hyperuniform nanostructuring for the spectral range of 400 to 1050 nm. The absorption equivalent photocurrent derived from our measurements is 26.3 mA/cm2, which is far above...
We present nanophotonic light harvesting crystalline silicon c Si thin films on glass exhibiting t...
International audienceUltrathin c-Si solar cells have the potential to drastically reduce costs by s...
We numerically investigate the light-absorption behavior of thin-film silicon for normal-incident li...
Thin, flexible, and invisible solar cells will be a ubiquitous technology in the near future. Ultrat...
This thesis provides new solutions for integrable PV by exploiting nanophotonic principles in nanosc...
Thick wafer-silicon is the dominant solar cell technology. It is of great interest to develop ultra-...
Light-trapping schemes implemented with ultrathin, 3 μm thick silicon solar cells offer excellent op...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, 2015.Ca...
We present a modelling study of thin silicon based solar cells endowed with periodic and decoupled f...
ABSTRACT: Enhancing the light absorption in ultrathin-film silicon solar cells is important for impr...
We present our results on optical absorption enhancement in crystalline silicon c Si absorber stru...
Thin-film crystalline silicon (c-Si) solar cells with light-trapping structures can enhance light ab...
The main challenge with the use of silicon for photovoltaics is that silicon is not a strong absorbe...
Ultrathin crystalline silicon solar cells are a promising technology roadmap to achieve more cost ef...
For solar cells based on thin-film microcrystalline (mu c-Si:H) or amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) with a...
We present nanophotonic light harvesting crystalline silicon c Si thin films on glass exhibiting t...
International audienceUltrathin c-Si solar cells have the potential to drastically reduce costs by s...
We numerically investigate the light-absorption behavior of thin-film silicon for normal-incident li...
Thin, flexible, and invisible solar cells will be a ubiquitous technology in the near future. Ultrat...
This thesis provides new solutions for integrable PV by exploiting nanophotonic principles in nanosc...
Thick wafer-silicon is the dominant solar cell technology. It is of great interest to develop ultra-...
Light-trapping schemes implemented with ultrathin, 3 μm thick silicon solar cells offer excellent op...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, 2015.Ca...
We present a modelling study of thin silicon based solar cells endowed with periodic and decoupled f...
ABSTRACT: Enhancing the light absorption in ultrathin-film silicon solar cells is important for impr...
We present our results on optical absorption enhancement in crystalline silicon c Si absorber stru...
Thin-film crystalline silicon (c-Si) solar cells with light-trapping structures can enhance light ab...
The main challenge with the use of silicon for photovoltaics is that silicon is not a strong absorbe...
Ultrathin crystalline silicon solar cells are a promising technology roadmap to achieve more cost ef...
For solar cells based on thin-film microcrystalline (mu c-Si:H) or amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) with a...
We present nanophotonic light harvesting crystalline silicon c Si thin films on glass exhibiting t...
International audienceUltrathin c-Si solar cells have the potential to drastically reduce costs by s...
We numerically investigate the light-absorption behavior of thin-film silicon for normal-incident li...