Solar Cell Materials: (Record no. 2090)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 06983nam a22001817a 4500
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION
control field 20240221095756.0
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION
fixed length control field 240221b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number 9780470065518
082 ## - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
Classification number 621.312
Item number WIL
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Arthur Willoughby
245 ## - TITLE STATEMENT
Title Solar Cell Materials:
Remainder of title Developing Technologies
Statement of responsibility, etc. Arthur Willoughby
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC.
Place of publication, distribution, etc. UK
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. WILEY
Date of publication, distribution, etc. 2014
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Page number 325P
505 ## - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE
Title 1 Introduction 1<br/>Gavin Conibeer and Arthur Willoughby<br/><br/>1.1 Introduction 1<br/><br/>1.2 The Sun 1<br/><br/>1.3 Book Outline 3<br/><br/>References 4<br/><br/>2 Fundamental Physical Limits to Photovoltaic Conversion 5<br/>J.F. Guillemoles<br/><br/>2.1 Introduction 5<br/><br/>2.2 Thermodynamic Limits 8<br/><br/>2.2.1 The Sun is the Limit 9<br/><br/>2.2.2 Classical Thermodynamics Analysis of Solar Energy Conversion 10<br/><br/>2.3 Limitations of Classical Devices 12<br/><br/>2.3.1 Detailed Balance and Main Assumptions 13<br/><br/>2.3.2 p-n Junction 14<br/><br/>2.3.3 The Two-Level System Model 17<br/><br/>2.3.4 Multijunctions 19<br/><br/>2.4 Fundamental Limits of Some High-Efficiency Concepts 22<br/><br/>2.4.1 Beyond Unity Quantum Efficiency 23<br/><br/>2.4.2 Beyond Isothermal Conversion: Hot-Carrier Solar Cells (HCSC) 29<br/><br/>2.4.3 Beyond the Single Process/ Photon: Photon Conversion 32<br/><br/>2.5 Conclusion 33<br/><br/>Note 33<br/><br/>References 33<br/><br/>3 Physical Characterisation of Photovoltaic Materials 35<br/>Daniel Bellet and Edith Bellet-Amalric<br/><br/>3.1 Introduction 35<br/><br/>3.2 Correspondence between Photovoltaic Materials Characterisation Needs and Physical Techniques 35<br/><br/>3.3 X-Ray Techniques 36<br/><br/>3.3.1 X-Ray Diffraction (XRD) 37<br/><br/>3.3.2 Grazing-Incidence X-Ray Diffraction (GIXRD) 40<br/><br/>3.3.3 X-Ray Reflectivity (XRR) 42<br/><br/>3.3.4 Other X-Ray Techniques 44<br/><br/>3.4 Electron Microscopy Methods 45<br/><br/>3.4.1 Electron–Specimen Interactions and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) 48<br/><br/>3.4.2 Electron Backscattering Diffraction (EBSD) 49<br/><br/>3.4.3 Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) 51<br/><br/>3.4.4 Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy (EELS) 52<br/><br/>3.5 Spectroscopy Methods 53<br/><br/>3.5.1 X-Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS) 53<br/><br/>3.5.2 Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS) 55<br/><br/>3.5.3 Rutherford Backscattering Spectrometry (RBS) 56<br/><br/>3.5.4 Raman Spectroscopy 56<br/><br/>3.5.5 UV-VIS-NIR Spectroscopy 58<br/><br/>3.6 Concluding Remarks and Perspectives 59<br/><br/>Acknowledgements 60<br/><br/>References 60<br/><br/>4 Developments in Crystalline Silicon Solar Cells 65<br/>Martin A. Green<br/><br/>4.1 Introduction 65<br/><br/>4.2 Present Market Overview 66<br/><br/>4.3 Silicon Wafers 67<br/><br/>4.3.1 Standard Process 67<br/><br/>4.3.2 Multicrystalline Silicon Ingots 70<br/><br/>4.3.3 Ribbon Silicon 71<br/><br/>4.4 Cell Processing 73<br/><br/>4.4.1 Screen-Printed Cells 73<br/><br/>4.4.2 Buried-Contact and Laser Doped, Selective-Emitter Solar Cells 76<br/><br/>4.4.3 HIT Cell 77<br/><br/>4.4.4 Rear-Contact Cell 78<br/><br/>4.4.5 PERL Solar Cell 79<br/><br/>4.5 Conclusion 82<br/><br/>Acknowledgements 82<br/><br/>References 82<br/><br/>5 Amorphous and Microcrystalline Silicon Solar Cells 85<br/>R.E.I. Schropp<br/><br/>5.1 Introduction 85<br/><br/>5.2 Deposition Methods 87<br/><br/>5.2.1 Modifications of Direct PECVD Techniques 88<br/><br/>5.2.2 Remote PECVD Techniques 89<br/><br/>5.2.3 Inline HWCVD Deposition 91<br/><br/>5.3 Material Properties 91<br/><br/>5.3.1 Protocrystalline Silicon 92<br/><br/>5.3.2 Microcrystalline or Nanocrystalline Silicon 93<br/><br/>5.4 Single-Junction Cell 96<br/><br/>5.4.1 Amorphous (Protocrystalline) Silicon Cells 98<br/><br/>5.4.2 Microcrystalline (μc-Si:H) Silicon Cells 99<br/><br/>5.4.3 Higher Deposition Rate 101<br/><br/>5.5 Multijunction Cells 102<br/><br/>5.6 Modules and Production 103<br/><br/>Acknowledgments 106<br/><br/>References 106<br/><br/>6 III-V Solar Cells 113<br/>N.J. Ekins-Daukes<br/><br/>6.1 Introduction 113<br/><br/>6.2 Homo- and Heterojunction III-V Solar Cells 115<br/><br/>6.2.1 GaAs Solar Cells 117<br/><br/>6.2.2 InP Solar Cells 120<br/><br/>6.2.3 InGaAsP 121<br/><br/>6.2.4 GaN 121<br/><br/>6.3 Multijunction Solar Cells 122<br/><br/>6.3.1 Monolithic Multijunction Solar Cells 123<br/><br/>6.3.2 Mechanically Stacked Multijunction Solar Cells 129<br/><br/>6.4 Applications 131<br/><br/>6.4.1 III-V Space Photovoltaic Systems 131<br/><br/>6.4.2 III-V Concentrator Photovoltaic Systems 132<br/><br/>6.5 Conclusion 134<br/><br/>References 134<br/><br/>7 Chalcogenide Thin-Film Solar Cells 145<br/>M. Paire, S. Delbos, J. Vidal, N. Naghavi and J.F. Guillemoles<br/><br/>7.1 Introduction 145<br/><br/>7.2 CIGS 148<br/><br/>7.2.1 Device Fabrication 148<br/><br/>7.2.2 Material Properties 162<br/><br/>7.2.3 Device Properties 171<br/><br/>7.2.4 Outlook 181<br/><br/>7.3 Kesterites 185<br/><br/>7.3.1 Advantages of CZTS 185<br/><br/>7.3.2 Crystallographic and Optoelectronic Properties 187<br/><br/>7.3.3 Synthesis Strategies 190<br/><br/>Acknowledgements 196<br/><br/>References 196<br/><br/>8 Printed Organic Solar Cells 217<br/>Claudia Hoth, Andrea Seemann, Roland Steim, Tayebeh Ameri, Hamed Azimi and Christoph J. Brabec<br/><br/>8.1 Introduction 217<br/><br/>8.2 Materials and Morphology 218<br/><br/>8.2.1 Organic Semiconductors 219<br/><br/>8.2.2 Control of Morphology in oBHJ Solar Cells 224<br/><br/>8.2.3 Monitoring Morphology 233<br/><br/>8.2.4 Numerical Simulations of Morphology 235<br/><br/>8.2.5 Alternative Approaches to Control the Morphology 235<br/><br/>8.3 Interfaces in Organic Photovoltaics 237<br/><br/>8.3.1 Origin of Voc 237<br/><br/>8.3.2 Determination of Polarity-Inverted and Noninverted Structure 238<br/><br/>8.3.3 Optical Spacer 239<br/><br/>8.3.4 Protection Layer between the Electrode and the Polymer 240<br/><br/>8.3.5 Selective Contact 240<br/><br/>8.3.6 Interface Material Review for OPV Cells 240<br/><br/>8.4 Tandem Technology 243<br/><br/>8.4.1 Theoretical Considerations 243<br/><br/>8.4.2 Review of Experimental Results 248<br/><br/>8.4.3 Design Rules for Donors in Bulk-Heterojunction Tandem Solar Cells 255<br/><br/>8.5 Electrode Requirements for Organic Solar Cells 257<br/><br/>8.5.1 Materials for Transparent Electrodes 258<br/><br/>8.5.2 Materials for Nontransparent Electrodes 263<br/><br/>8.6 Production of Organic Solar Cells 265<br/><br/>8.7 Summary and Outlook 273<br/><br/>References 273<br/><br/>9 Third-Generation Solar Cells 283<br/>Gavin Conibeer<br/><br/>9.1 Introduction 283<br/><br/>9.2 Multiple-Energy-Level Approaches 285<br/><br/>9.2.1 Tandem Cells 285<br/><br/>9.2.2 Multiple-Exciton Generation (MEG) 291<br/><br/>9.2.3 Intermediate-Band Solar Cells (IBSC) 293<br/><br/>9.3 Modification of the Solar Spectrum 294<br/><br/>9.3.1 Downconversion, QE > 1 294<br/><br/>9.3.2 Upconversion of Below-Bandgap Photons 297<br/><br/>9.4 Thermal Approaches 302<br/><br/>9.4.1 Thermophotovoltaics (TPV) 303<br/><br/>9.4.2 Thermophotonics 303<br/><br/>9.4.3 Hot-Carrier Cells 303<br/><br/>9.5 Other Approaches 308<br/><br/>9.5.1 Nonreciprocal Devices 308<br/><br/>9.5.2 Quantum Antennae – Light as a Wave 308<br/><br/>9.6 Conclusions 309<br/><br/>Acknowledgements 309<br/><br/>References 310<br/><br/>Concluding Remarks 315<br/>Gavin Conibeer and Arthur Willoughby<br/><br/>Index 319
520 ## - SUMMARY, ETC.
Summary, etc. This book presents a comparison of solar cell materials, including both new materials based on organics, nanostructures and novel inorganics and developments in more traditional photovoltaic materials.<br/><br/>It surveys the materials and materials trends in the field including third generation solar cells (multiple energy level cells, thermal approaches and the modification of the solar spectrum) with an eye firmly on low costs, energy efficiency and the use of abundant non-toxic materials.
700 ## - ADDED ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Gavin J. Conibeer (Editor),
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA)
Source of classification or shelving scheme Dewey Decimal Classification
Koha item type Books
952 ## - LOCATION AND ITEM INFORMATION (KOHA)
-- 6169
Holdings
Withdrawn status Lost status Source of classification or shelving scheme Damaged status Not for loan Collection code Home library Current library Shelving location Date acquired Source of acquisition Cost, normal purchase price Inventory number Total Checkouts Full call number Barcode Date last seen Cost, replacement price Price effective from Currency Koha item type
    Dewey Decimal Classification   Not For Loan Reference IIITDM Kurnool IIITDM Kurnool Reference 21.02.2024 Satish Serials 178.95 SSP:2023-24/247 DT 8-12-2023   621.312 WIL 0005408 21.02.2024 178.95 21.02.2024 USD Reference
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