http://www.space.com/businesstechnology/technology/trn_photovoltaic_040507.html


http://tinyurl.com/yszeg

One way to make solar cells more efficient is to find a material that
will capture energy from a large portion of the spectrum of
sunlight -- from infrared to visible light to ultraviolet.

Energy transfers from photons to a photovoltaic material when the
material absorbs lightwaves that contain the same amount of energy as
its bandgap. A bandgap is the energy required to push an electron from
a material's valence band to the conduction band where electrons are
free to flow.

Most photovoltaic materials absorb a relatively narrow range of light
energy, however. The most efficient silicon solar cells capture only
about 25 percent. Multijunction solar cells made from several
different materials boost efficiency as high as 36 percent, but are
relatively difficult to make and therefore expensive.

Researchers from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the University
of California, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have
engineered a single material that contains three bandgaps and is
capable of capturing more than 50 percent of the sun's energy. The
researchers made the material by forcing oxygen into a
zinc-manganese-tellurium crystal. The oxygen split the crystal's band
gap and formed a third one of its own.

The material could lead to relatively inexpensive, highly-efficient
solar cells that would be much simpler to make than today's high-end
multijunction solar cells.

It will take to three years to assess the technical feasibility of the
multiband solar cell, according to the researchers. The work appeared
in the December 12, 2003 issue of Physical Review Letters.



xponent

Betterer Maru

rob


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