Light trapping textures designed by electromagnetic optimization for subwavelength thick solar cells

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Abstract

Light trapping in solar cells allows for increased current and voltage, as well as reduced materials cost. It is known that in geometrical optics, a maximum 4n2 absorption enhancement factor can be achieved by randomly texturing the surface of the solar cell, where n is the material refractive index. This ray-optics absorption enhancement (AE) limit only holds when the thickness of the solar cell is much greater than the optical wavelength. In subwavelength thin films, the fundamental questions remain unanswered: 1) what is the subwavelength AE limit and 2) what surface texture realizes this optimal AE? We turn to computational electromagnetic optimization in order to design nanoscale textures for light trapping in subwavelength thin films. For high-index thin films, in the weakly absorbing limit, our optimized surface textures yield an angle-and frequency-averaged enhancement factor ∼39. They perform roughly 30% better than randomly textured structures, but they fall short of the ray optics enhancement limit of 4n2 ∼ 50. © 2013 IEEE.

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Ganapati, V., Miller, O. D., & Yablonovitch, E. (2014). Light trapping textures designed by electromagnetic optimization for subwavelength thick solar cells. IEEE Journal of Photovoltaics, 4(1), 175–182. https://doi.org/10.1109/JPHOTOV.2013.2280340

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