Meita Asami, Kentaroh Watanabe, Yoshiaki Nakano and Masakazu Sugiyama
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The escalating demand for improved energy conversion efficiency in vehicular applications of solar cells underscores the need for innovative solutions. This study focuses on enhancing the current density of GaAs middle cells within conventional Ge-based triple-junction solar cells to realize unprecedented levels of energy conversion efficiency. We introduced a novel superlattice configuration termed a compressively strained superlattice (CSSL) and demonstrated its integration into a p-i-n junction GaAs solar cell, achieving a current density increase of 1.03 mA cm−2 over conventional GaAs solar cells. Prior investigations have explored a strain-balanced superlattice (SBSL) to enhance GaAs middle cell current density. However, our findings establish the superiority of the CSSL over the SBSL in terms of current density improvement, with the CSSL featuring 1.59 times more quantum wells per unit length than the SBSL. This increase in quantum well quantity significantly enhances light absorption efficiency and consequently, the current density.
期刊介绍:
The Japanese Journal of Applied Physics (JJAP) is an international journal for the advancement and dissemination of knowledge in all fields of applied physics. JJAP is a sister journal of the Applied Physics Express (APEX) and is published by IOP Publishing Ltd on behalf of the Japan Society of Applied Physics (JSAP).
JJAP publishes articles that significantly contribute to the advancements in the applications of physical principles as well as in the understanding of physics in view of particular applications in mind. Subjects covered by JJAP include the following fields:
• Semiconductors, dielectrics, and organic materials
• Photonics, quantum electronics, optics, and spectroscopy
• Spintronics, superconductivity, and strongly correlated materials
• Device physics including quantum information processing
• Physics-based circuits and systems
• Nanoscale science and technology
• Crystal growth, surfaces, interfaces, thin films, and bulk materials
• Plasmas, applied atomic and molecular physics, and applied nuclear physics
• Device processing, fabrication and measurement technologies, and instrumentation
• Cross-disciplinary areas such as bioelectronics/photonics, biosensing, environmental/energy technologies, and MEMS