Monday, October 17, 2011: 10:30 AM
102 E (Minneapolis Convention Center)
Solar energy is clean, abundant, and renewable, yet it is vastly under-utilized in the current world. Although crystalline silicon solar cells are the premier candidate for renewable and environmentally friendly solar energy conversion, high manufacturing cost has prevented such cells from economically competing with the combustion of fossil fuels as a source of electricity on a large scale. We have developed a scalable bottom-up nanomanufacturing platform for mass-producing highly efficient photovoltaics by exploring effective photon management using surface-plasmon-enabled transparent conducting electrodes and subwavelength antireflective coatings. In this methodology, self-assembled colloidal crystals with remarkably large domain sizes are used as templates to create periodic metallic nanohole arrays and subwavelength moth-eye antireflection coatings. The resulting metallic nanohole arrays exhibit high and tunable optical transmission and high electrical conductivity, promising as transparent conducting electrodes for flexible photovoltaics. The subwavelength-structured moth-eye antireflection coatings show much improved broadband antireflective properties than traditional quarter-wavelength coatings. This novel nanomanufacturing platform combines the simplicity and cost benefits of bottom-up self-assembly with the scalability and compatibility of top-down microfabrication.
See more of this Session: Nanomaterials for Photovoltaics I
See more of this Group/Topical: Topical 5: Nanomaterials for Energy Applications
See more of this Group/Topical: Topical 5: Nanomaterials for Energy Applications