探花直播GLA building鈥檚 solar panels. Perovskite solar cells are already challenging the energy-efficiency of silicon cells such as these.

Researchers have quantified the astonishingly high speeds at which future solar cells would have to operate in order to stretch what are presently seen as natural limits on their energy conversion efficiency.

探花直播timescale that we calculated is now the time limit that we have to operate within if we want to create super-efficient, hot carrier solar devices.

Johannes Richter

, which investigated photovoltaic devices based on a type of materials called perovskites, suggests that these could achieve unprecedented levels of super-efficiency. But to do so, they will need to turn sunlight into electrons and then extract these as electrical charge within just quadrillionths of a second 鈥 a few 鈥渇emtoseconds鈥, to give them their scientific name.

Moving electrons at this ultrafast rate would enable the creation of 鈥渉ot carrier鈥 cells. These are solar cells which can generate electricity more efficiently by making use of the added kinetic energy that electrons have for a brief moment just after they are created, while they are moving at high speed.

探花直播amount of electrical energy that can be extracted from a hot carrier cell, relative to the amount of light absorbed, could potentially match or even break an energy efficiency rate of 30%. In rough terms, this is the maximum energy efficiency that solar cells can conceivably 听achieve 鈥 although standard silicon cells typically have efficiencies closer to 20% in practice.

Despite the minuscule fractions of time involved, the authors of the new paper say that it is possible that perovskites could ultimately push this efficiency barrier.

探花直播study, published in the journal Nature Communications, was carried out by academics in Italy and the UK. 探花直播British team involved researchers in the Cavendish Laboratory鈥檚 Optoelectronics research group of Professor Sir Richard Friend, a Fellow of St John鈥檚 College, Cambridge. 探花直播Italian team are based at the Politecnico di Milano in the group of Professor Guilio Cerullo.

Johannes Richter, a PhD student in the Optoelectronics group and the paper鈥檚 lead author, said: 鈥 探花直播timescale that we calculated is now the time limit that we have to operate within if we want to create super-efficient, hot carrier solar devices. We would need to get electrons out before this tiny amount of time elapses.鈥

鈥淲e are talking about doing this extremely quickly, but it鈥檚 not impossible that it could happen. Perovskite cells are very thin and this gives us hope, because the distance that the electrons have to cover is therefore very short.鈥

Perovskites are a class of materials which could before long replace silicon as the material of choice for many photovoltaic devices. Although perovskite solar cells have only been developed within the past few years, they are already almost as energy-efficient as silicon.

Partly because they are considerably thinner, they are much cheaper to make. While silicon cells are about a millimetre thick, perovskite equivalents have a thickness of approximately one micrometre, about 100 times thinner than a human hair. They are also very flexible, meaning that in addition to being used to power buildings and machines, perovskite cells could eventually be incorporated into things like tents, or even clothing.

In the new study, the researchers wanted to know for how long the electrons produced by these cells retain their highest possible levels of energy. When sunlight hits the cell, light particles (or photons), are converted into electrons. These can be drawn out through an electrode to harvest electrical charge.

For a brief moment after they are created, the electrons are moving very quickly. However, they then start to collide, and lose energy. Electrons which retain their speed, prior to collision, are known as 鈥渉ot鈥 and their added kinetic energy means that they have the potential to produce more charge.

鈥淚magine if you had a pool table and each ball was moving at the same speed,鈥 Richter explained. 鈥淎fter a certain amount of time, they are going to hit each other, which causes them to slow down and change direction. We wanted to know how long we have to extract the electrons before this happens.鈥

探花直播Cambridge team took advantage of a method developed by their colleagues in Milan called two dimensional spectroscopy. This involves pumping light from two lasers on to samples of lead iodide perovskite cell in order to simulate sunlight, and then using a third 鈥減robe鈥 laser to measure how much light is being absorbed.

Once the electrons have collided and slowed down, and are thus starting to take up space in the cell, the amount of light being absorbed changes. 探花直播time it took for this to happen in the study effectively allowed the researchers to establish how much time is available to extract electrons while they are still 鈥渉ot鈥.

探花直播study found that electron collision events started to happen between 10 and 100 femtoseconds after light was initially absorbed by the cell. To maximise energy efficiency, the electrons would thus need to reach the electrode in as little as 10 quadrillionths of a second.

探花直播researchers are nonetheless optimistic that this might be possible. As well as taking advantage of the intrinsic thinness of perovskite, they believe that nanostructures could be created within the cells to reduce further the distance that the electrons need to travel.

鈥淭hat approach is just an idea for now, but it is the sort of thing that we would require in order to overcome the very small timescales that we have measured,鈥 Richter added.

探花直播paper, , is published in Nature Communications.



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