SOLAR DAILY
Efficiently turning light into electricity
by Staff Writers
Osaka, Japan (SPX) Oct 12, 2018

Dr. Leyre Gomez (right) and Dr. Chris de Weerd (left) with a sample of the studied material.

Perovskites form a group of crystals that have many promising properties for applications in nano-technology. However, one useful property that so far was unobserved in perovskites is so-called carrier multiplication - an effect that makes materials much more efficient in converting light into electricity.

New research performed in collaboration between the University of Amsterdam (UA) and Osaka University (OU) and led by prof. Tom Gregorkiewicz (UA, OU) and prof. Yasufumi Fujiwara (OU), has now shown that certain perovskites in fact do have this desirable property.

Crystals are configurations of atoms, molecules or ions, that are ordered in a structure that repeats itself in all directions. We have all encountered some crystals in everyday life: ordinary salt, diamond and even snowflakes are examples.

What is perhaps less well-known is that certain crystals show very interesting properties when their size is not that of our everyday life but that of nanometers - a few billionths of a meter. There, we enter the world of nanocrystals, structures that have shown to be extremely useful in constructing technological applications at tiny scales.

Perovskites - named after 19th century Russian mineralogist Lev Perovski - form a particular family of nanocrystals that all share the same crystal structure. At the nanoscale, these perovskites have many desirable electronic properties, making them useful for constructing for example LEDs, TV-screens, solar cells and lasers. For this reason, in the past years perovskite nanocrystals have been studied extensively by physicists.

Carrier multiplication
A property which so-far had not been shown to exist in perovskites is carrier multiplication. When nanocrystals - in solar cells, for example - convert the energy of light into electricity, this is usually done one particle at a time: a single infalling photon results in a single excited electron (and the corresponding "hole" where the electron used to be) that can carry an electrical current.

However, in certain materials, if the infalling light is energetic enough, further electron-hole pairs can be excited as a result; it is this process that is known as carrier multiplication.

When carrier multiplication occurs, the conversion from light into electricity can become much more efficient. For example, in ordinary solar cells there is a theoretical limit (the so-called Shockley-Queisser limit) on the amount of energy that can be converted in this way: at most a little of 30% of the solar power gets turned into electrical power. In materials that display the carrier multiplication effect, however, an efficiency of up to 44% has already been obtained.

PhD
This makes it very interesting to search for the carrier multiplication effect in perovskites as well, and that is precisely what dr. Chris de Weerd and dr. Leyre Gomez from the Optoelectronic Materials group led by prof.

Tom Gregorkiewicz, in collaboration with the group of prof. Yasufumi Fujiwara, and with support of their colleagues from the National AIST Institute in Tsukuba and Technical University Delft have now done.

Using spectroscopy methods - studying the frequencies of the radiation that comes from a material after very briefly illuminating it with a flash of light - the researchers showed that a perovskite nanocrystals made out of cesium, lead and iodine, do indeed display carrier multiplication.

Moreover, they argue that the efficiency of this effect is higher than reported thus far for any other materials; with this finding therefore the extraordinary properties of perovskite receive a new boost!

De Weerd, who successfully defended her PhD thesis based on this and other research last week, says: "Until now, carrier multiplication had not been reported for perovskites. That we have now found it is of great fundamental impact on this upcoming material. For example, this shows that perovskites can be used to construct very efficient photodetectors, and in the future perhaps solar cells."

Research Report: "Efficient carrier multiplication in CsPbI3 perovskite nanocrystals"


Related Links
Osaka University
All About Solar Energy at SolarDaily.com

SOLAR DAILY
Artificial enzymes convert solar energy into hydrogen gas
Uppsala, Sweden (SPX) Oct 11, 2018
In a new scientific article, researchers at Uppsala University describe how, using a completely new method, they have synthesised an artificial enzyme that functions in the metabolism of living cells. These enzymes can utilize the cell's own energy, and thereby enable hydrogen gas to be produced from solar energy. Hydrogen gas has long been noted as a promising energy carrier, but its production is still dependent on fossil raw materials. Renewable hydrogen gas can be extracted from water, but as ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

SOLAR DAILY
Sebigas Awarded For The Construction Of The Biggest Biogas Plant In The Americas

In pre-vote boost for farmers, Trump to ease ethanol fuel rules

A biofuel for automated heat generation

Climate researchers: More green space, less biofuel

SOLAR DAILY
No more Iron Man: submarines now have soft, robotic arms

Model helps robots navigate more like humans do

Increasingly human-like robots spark fascination and fear

Machine learning could help regulators identify environmental violations

SOLAR DAILY
Ingeteam opens new high-tech production facility for electrical wind turbine components in India

Wind turbine installation vessel launching and construction supervision contract

UCSB mechanical engineer develops ways to improve windfarm productivity

Large-scale US wind power would cause warming that would take roughly a century to offset

SOLAR DAILY
Bioinspired camera could help self-driving cars see better

German car industry warns CO2 targets risk jobs

Tough CO2 targets 'could cost 100,000 jobs': VW chief

BMW plans to take control of China joint venture

SOLAR DAILY
Chile lithium miner shareholder sue to block sale to China's Tianqi

A new path to solving a longstanding fusion challenge

Abrikosov vortices help scientists explain inconsistencies in 'dirty' superconductors theory

New fuel cell concept brings biological design to better electricity generation

SOLAR DAILY
US curbs China nuclear exports as Trump warns Americans not 'stupid'

At Le Creusot, dimensional inspection of test pieces is going digital

New concept to cool boiling surface may help prevent nuclear power plant accidents

TVO joins FROG as EPR reactor operator

SOLAR DAILY
How will climate change stress the power grid

Electricity crisis leaves Iraqis gasping for cool air

Energy-intensive Bitcoin transactions pose a growing environmental threat

Germany thwarts China by taking stake in 50Hertz power firm

SOLAR DAILY
Secondary forests have short lifespans

Climate change, pests, fallen trees a deadly recipe for US forests

How leaves talk to roots

National parks bear the brunt of climate change