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This electric field acts as a diode, allowing (and even pushing) electrons to flow from the P side to the N side, but not the other way around. It's like a hill
-- electrons can easily go down the hill (to the N side), but can't climb it (to the P side). So we've got an electric field acting as a diode in which electrons can only move in one direction. Let's
see what happens when light hits the cell. When light, in the form of photons, hits our solar cell, its energy frees electron-hole pairs. Each photon with enough energy will normally free exactly one electron, and result in a free hole as well.
If this happens close enough to the electric field, or if free electron and free hole happen to wander into its range of influence,
the field will send the electron to the N side and the hole to the P side. This causes further disruption of electrical neutrality,
and if we provide an external current path, electrons will flow through the path to their original side (the P side) to unite
with holes that the electric field sent there, doing work for us along the way. The electron flow provides the current,
and the cell's electric field causes a voltage. With both current and voltage, we have power, which is the product
of the two.
![]() ![]() How much sunlight energy does our PV cell absorb? Unfortunately, the most that our simple cell could absorb
is around 25 percent, and more likely is 15 percent or less. Why so little? Visible light is only part of the electromagnetic spectrum. Electromagnetic radiation is not monochromatic -- it is made up of a range of different wavelengths, and therefore energy
levels. (See How Special Relativity Works for a good discussion of the electromagnetic spectrum.) Light can be separated into different wavelengths, and we can see them in the form of a rainbow. Since
the light that hits our cell has photons of a wide range of energies, it turns out that some of them won't have enough energy
to form an electron-hole pair. They'll simply pass through the cell as if it were transparent. Still other photons have too
much energy. Only a certain amount of energy, measured in electron volts (eV) and defined by our
cell material (about 1.1 eV for crystalline silicon), is required to knock an electron loose. We
call this the band gap energy of a material. If a photon has more energy than the required amount, then the extra energy
is lost (unless a photon has twice the required energy, and can create more than one electron-hole pair, but this effect is
not significant). These two effects alone account for the loss of around 70 percent of the radiation energy incident on our
cell. Why can't we choose a material with a really low band gap, so we can use more of the photons? Unfortunately,
our band gap also determines the strength (voltage) of our electric field, and if it's too low, then what we make up in extra
current (by absorbing more photons), we lose by having a small voltage. Remember that power is voltage times current. The
optimal band gap, balancing these two effects, is around 1.4 eV for a cell made from a single
material. We have other losses as well. Our electrons have to flow from one side of the cell to the other through
an external circuit. We can cover the bottom with a metal, allowing for good conduction, but if we completely cover the top,
then photons can't get through the opaque conductor and we lose all of our current (in some cells, transparent conductors
are used on the top surface, but not in all). If we put our contacts only at the sides of our cell, then the electrons have
to travel an extremely long distance (for an electron) to reach the contacts. Remember, silicon is a semiconductor -- it's
not nearly as good as a metal for transporting current. Its internal resistance (called series resistance) is fairly
high, and high resistance means high losses. To minimize these losses, our cell is covered by a metallic contact grid that
shortens the distance that electrons have to travel while covering only a small part of the cell surface. Even so, some photons
are blocked by the grid, which can't be too small or else its own resistance will be too high. There are a few more steps left before we can really use our cell. Silicon happens to be a very shiny
material, which means that it is very reflective. Photons that are reflected can't be used by the cell. For that reason, an
antireflective coating is applied to the top of the cell to reduce reflection losses to less than 5 percent. The final step is the glass cover plate that protects the cell from the elements. PV modules are
made by connecting several cells (usually 36) in series and parallel to achieve useful levels of voltage and current, and
putting them in a sturdy frame complete with a glass cover and positive and negative terminals on the back.
![]() ![]() Single crystal silicon isn't the only material used in PV cells. Polycrystalline silicon is also used
in an attempt to cut manufacturing costs, although resulting cells aren't as efficient as single crystal silicon. Amorphous
silicon, which has no crystalline structure, is also used, again in an attempt to reduce production costs. Other materials
used include gallium arsenide, copper indium diselenide and cadmium telluride. Since different materials
have different band gaps, they seem to be "tuned" to different wavelengths, or photons of different energies. One way efficiency
has been improved is to use two or more layers of different materials with different band gaps. The higher band gap material
is on the surface, absorbing high-energy photons while allowing lower-energy photons to be absorbed by the lower band gap
material beneath. This technique can result in much higher efficiencies. Such cells, called multi-junction cells, can
have more than one electric field.
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