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Solar electron source and thermionic solar cell
Author(s) -
Parham Yaghoobi,
Mehran Vahdani Moghaddam,
Alireza Nojeh
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
aip advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.421
H-Index - 58
ISSN - 2158-3226
DOI - 10.1063/1.4766942
Subject(s) - thermionic emission , thermophotovoltaic , materials science , anode , optoelectronics , cathode , solar energy , photovoltaic system , solar cell , energy storage , electricity generation , energy transformation , nuclear engineering , engineering physics , electron , electrode , electrical engineering , physics , common emitter , power (physics) , quantum mechanics , thermodynamics , engineering
Common solar technologies are either photovoltaic/thermophotovoltaic, or use indirect methods of electricity generation such as boiling water for a steam turbine. Thermionic energy conversion based on the emission of electrons from a hot cathode into vacuum and their collection by an anode is also a promising route. However, thermionic solar conversion is extremely challenging as the sunlight intensity is too low for heating a conventional cathode to thermionic emission temperatures in a practical manner. Therefore, compared to other technologies, little has been done in this area, and the devices have been mainly limited to large experimental apparatus investigated for space power applications. Based on a recently observed “Heat Trap” effect in carbon nanotube arrays, allowing their efficient heating with low-power light, we report the first compact thermionic solar cell. Even using a simple off-the-shelf focusing lens, the device delivered over 1 V across a load. The device also shows intrinsic storage capacity

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