HOW DO PHOTOVOLTAICS WORK?
Photovoltaics is the direct conversion of light into electricity at the atomic level.
Some materials exhibit a property known as the photoelectric effect that causes
them to absorb photons of light and release electrons. When these free electrons
are captured, an electric current results that can be used as electricity.The photoelectric
effect was first noted by a French physicist, Edmund Bequerel, in 1839, who found
that certain materials would produce small amounts of electric current when exposed
to light. In 1905, Albert Einstein described the nature of light and the photoelectric
effect on which photovoltaic technology is based, for which he later won a Nobel
prize in physics. The first photovoltaic module was built by Bell Laboratories in
1954. It was billed as a solar battery and was mostly just a curiosity as it was
too expensive to gain widespread use. In the 1960s, the space industry began to make the first serious use of the technology to provide power aboard spacecraft.
Through the space programs, the technology advanced, its reliability was established,
and the cost began to decline. During the energy crisis in the 1970s, photovoltaic
technology gained recognition as a source of power for non-space applications. The
diagram above illustrates the operation of a basic photovoltaic cell, also called
a solar cell. Solar cells are made of the same kinds of semiconductor materials,
such as silicon, used in the microelectronics industry. For solar cells, a thin
semiconductor wafer is specially treated to form an electric field, positive on
one side and negative on the other. When light energy strikes the solar cell, electrons
are knocked loose from the atoms in the semiconductor material. If electrical conductors
are attached to the positive and negative sides, forming an electrical circuit,
the electrons can be captured in the form of an electric current -- that is, electricity.
This electricity can then be used to power a load, such as a light
or a tool.A number of solar cells electrically connected to each other and mounted
in a support structure or frame is called a photovoltaic module. Modules are designed
to supply electricity at a certain voltage, such as a common 12 volts system. The
current produced is directly dependent on how much light strikes the module. Multiple
modules can be wired together to form an array. In general, the larger the area
of a module or array, the more electricity that will be produced. Photovoltaic modules
and arrays produce direct-current (dc) electricity. They can be connected in both
series and parallel electrical arrangements to produce any required voltage and
current combination.Today's most common PV devices use a single junction, or interface,
to create an electric field within a semiconductor such as a PV cell. In a single-junction
PV cell, only photons whose energy is equal to or greater than the band gap of the
cell material can free an electron for an electric circuit. In other words, the
photovoltaic response of single-junction cells is limited to the portion of the
sun's spectrum whose energy is above the band gap of the absorbing material, and
lower-energy photons are not used.One way to get around this limitation is to use
two (or more) different cells, with more than one band gap and more than one junction,
to generate a voltage. These are referred to as "multijunction" cells (also called
"cascade" or "tandem" cells). Multijunction devices can achieve a higher total conversion
efficiency because they can convert more of the energy spectrum of light to electricity.As
shown below, a multijunction device is a stack of individual single-junction cells
in descending order of band gap (Eg). The top cell captures the high-energy photons
and passes the rest of the photons on to be absorbed by lower-band-gap cells.Much
of today's research in multijunction cells focuses on gallium arsenide as one (or
all) of the component cells. Such cells have reached efficiencies of around 35%
under concentrated sunlight. Other materials studied for multijunction devices have
been amorphous silicon and copper indium diselenide.