3D Solar Cells
A new solar panel unveiled by Georgia
Tech Research Institute in Atlanta in April 2007 promises
to produce about 60 times more electricity than traditional
solar cells. The new cells are smaller and less complex.
Conventional flat solar cells reflect
a significant portion of the light that hits them, reducing
the amount of energy absorbed. But these new three-dimensional
solar cells capture nearly all the light striking them
using an array of nano towers-structures that resemble
high-rise buildings in a city grid. These towers can
trap and absorb light received from many different angles,
even when the sun is not directly overhead, and can
thus boost the efficiency of photovoltaic systems.
"Our goal is to harvest every
last photon available to our cells," says Jud Ready,
a senior research engineer at the institute's Electro-Optical
Systems Laboratory who invented the panels. "By
capturing more of the light in our 3d structures, we
can use much smaller photovoltaic arrays.
On a satellite or other spacecraft, that would mean
less weight and occupy less space."
The new cells produce good amount
of electricity but to generate power, they have to produce
voltage too. They still have too much resistance to
produce voltage. Ready and his team aim to cross this
hurdle in the next phase.
Source : Down to Earth,
June 2007