Solar power may be on the rise, but solar cells are only as efficient as the amount of sunlight they collect. Under the direction of a new McCormick professor, researchers have developed a new material that absorbs a wide range of wavelengths1 and could lead to more efficient and less expensive solar technology. A paper describing the findings, "Broadband polarization-independent resonant2 light absorption using ultrathin plasmonic super absorbers," was published November 1 in the journal Nature Communications.
"The solar spectrum3 is not like a laser -- it's very broadband, starting with UV and going up to near-infrared," said Koray Aydin, assistant professor of electrical engineering and computer science and the paper's lead author. "To capture this light most efficiently4, a solar cell needs to have a broadband response. This design allows us to achieve that."
The researchers used two unconventional materials -- metal and silicon5 oxide6 -- to create thin but complex, trapezoid(梯形的) -shaped metal gratings on the nanoscale that can trap a wider range of visible light. The use of these materials is unusual because on their own, they do not absorb light; however, they worked together on the nanoscale to achieve very high absorption rates, Aydin said.
The uniquely shaped grating(光栅) captured a wide range of wavelengths due to the local optical resonances7, causing light to spend more time inside the material until it gets absorbed. This composite metamaterial(特异材料) was also able to collect light from many different angles -- a useful quality when dealing8 with sunlight, which hits solar cells at different angles as sun moves from east to west throughout the day.
This research is not directly applicable to solar cell technology because metal and silicon oxide cannot convert light to electricity; in fact, the photons are converted to heat and might allow novel ways to control the heat flow at the nanoscale. However, the innovative9 trapezoid shape could be replicated10 in semiconducting materials that could be used in solar cells, Aydin said.
If applied11 to semiconducting materials, the technology could lead to thinner, lower-cost, and more efficient solar cells, he said.