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Foundation, an organisation dedicated to enabling microenterprise development in rural communities.


Gay began the early part of his career working for ARCO Solar where he forged the transition of single crystalline silicon from R&D to mass production. In 1994, he was elected director of NREL where he managed an annual budget of more than $235 million, with a staff of more than 1,000 employees. After his tenure at NREL, he served as president of ASE Americas.


From 2001 to 2005, Gay served as chairman of the SunPower Advisory Board. He then joined Applied Materials in 2006 as corporate vice president and general manager of the Solar Business Group. He was named president of Applied Solar and chairman of the Applied Solar Council in 2009.


“I am honoured to join such an experienced team with Beck, Noufi, and Benner,” says Gay. “Collectively, they represent one of the most experienced groups ever assembled for CIGS technology and high volume manufacturing.”


Novel solar cell technology handles the blues


A new technology enables the capture of high-energy photons more efficiently in CIS solar cells


Getting the blues is rarely a desirable experience - unless you’re a solar cell, that is.


Scientists have together developed a new, inexpensive material that has the potential to capture and convert solar energy - particularly from the bluer part of the spectrum - much more efficiently than ever before.


The researchers are from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory and the University of Texas at Austin.


electromagnetic spectrum inefficiently. This is because blue photons - incoming particles of light that strike the solar cell - actually have excess energy that a conventional solar cell can’t capture


“Photons of different energies kick electrons up by different amounts,” says Brian Korgel, a professor at the University of Texas. “Some photons come in with more energy than the cell is optimised to handle, and so a lot of that energy is lost as heat.”


Because of this limitation, scientists had originally believed that simple solar cells would never be able to convert more than about 34 percent of incoming solar radiation to electricity.


However, about a decade ago, researchers saw the potential for a single high-energy photon to stimulate multiple ‘excitons’ (pairs of an electron and a positively- charged partner called a ‘hole’) instead of just one. “This was a very exciting discovery, but we were still sceptical that we could get the electrons out of the material,” Korgel says.


In their study, Korgel and his team used specialised spectroscopic equipment at Argonne’s Centre for Nanoscale Materials to look at multi-exciton generation in copper indium selenide (CIS), a material closely related to another more commonly produced thin film that holds the record for the most efficient thin-film semiconductor.”


This is one of the first studies done of multiple exciton generation in such a familiar and inexpensive material,” notes Argonne nanoscientist Richard Schaller. “Argonne’s spectroscopic techniques played a critical role in the detection of the multi-excitons,”


Korgel notes. “These kinds of measurements can’t be made many places.”


In order to deposit thin films of the nanocrystalline material, the researchers used a process known as ‘photonic curing’, which involves the split-second heating up and cooling down of the top layer of the material. This curing process not only prevents the melting of the glass that contains the nanocrystals, but also vaporises organic molecules that inhibit multiple exciton extraction.


Although the study mostly proves that the efficiency boost provided by multiple exciton extraction is possible in mass-producible materials, the major hurdle will be to incorporate these materials into actual real-world devices.


Most simple solar cells handle the bluish hues of the


“The holy grail of our research is not necessarily to boost efficiencies as high as they can theoretically go, but rather to combine increases in efficiency to the kind of large-scale roll-to-roll printing or processing technologies


March 2014 www.compoundsemiconductor.net 133


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