Is Auger recombination the ultimate performance limiter in concentrator solar cells?
Abstract
In principle, Auger recombination should constitute the ultimate limiting mechanism for concentrator photovoltaic performance as optical concentration, and hence current densities, are raised to progressively higher values. In reality, however, the effect will be rate-limiting only in indirect-band-gap solar cells—a point well established for silicon but not yet explored for germanium which comprises the lowest-energy junction in today's ultraefficient commercial multijunction concentrator solar cells. Detailed calculations of when Auger recombination should play a substantial role are presented, and reinforced by existing data.
- Publication:
-
Applied Physics Letters
- Pub Date:
- November 2010
- DOI:
- 10.1063/1.3510474
- Bibcode:
- 2010ApPhL..97s3509V
- Keywords:
-
- Auger effect;
- current density;
- electron-hole recombination;
- elemental semiconductors;
- energy gap;
- gallium arsenide;
- gallium compounds;
- germanium;
- III-V semiconductors;
- indium compounds;
- solar cells;
- 88.40.H-;
- 88.40.ff;
- 72.20.Jv;
- 79.20.Fv;
- Charge carriers: generation recombination lifetime and trapping;
- Electron impact: Auger emission