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Performance Limits of Luminescent Solar Concentrators Tested with Seed/Quantum-Well Quantum Dots in a Selective-Reflector-Based Optical Cavity
Author(s) -
HyungJun Song,
Byeong Guk Jeong,
Jaehoon Lim,
Doh C. Lee,
Wan Ki Bae,
Victor I. Klimov
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
nano letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.853
H-Index - 488
eISSN - 1530-6992
pISSN - 1530-6984
DOI - 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b04263
Subject(s) - quantum dot , emissivity , optoelectronics , reflector (photography) , distributed bragg reflector , absorption (acoustics) , photoluminescence , optics , materials science , photon , photovoltaic system , solar cell , luminescence , quantum efficiency , quantum optics , quantum yield , wavelength , physics , fluorescence , biology , ecology , light source
Luminescent solar concentrators (LSCs) can serve as large-area sunlight collectors for photovoltaic devices. An important LSC characteristic is a concentration factor (C), which is defined as the ratio of the output and the input photon flux densities. This parameter can be also thought of as an effective enlargement factor of a solar cell active area. On the basis of thermodynamic considerations, the C-factor can reach extremely high values that exceed those accessible with traditional concentrating optics. In reality, however, the best reported values of C are around 30. Here we demonstrate that using a new type of high-emissivity quantum dots (QDs) incorporated into a specially designed cavity, we are able to achieve the C of ∼62 for spectrally integrated emission and ∼120 for the red portion of the photoluminescence spectrum. The key feature of these QDs is a seed/quantum-well/thick-shell design, which allows for obtaining a high emission quantum yield (>95%) simultaneously with a large LSC quality factor (Q LSC of ∼100) defined as the ratio of absorption coefficients at the wavelengths of incident and reemitted light. By incorporating the QDs into a specially designed cavity equipped with a top selective reflector (a Bragg mirror or a thin silver film), we are able to effectively recycle reemitted light achieving light trapping coefficients of ∼85%. The observed performance of these devices is in remarkable agreement with analytical modeling, which allows us to project that the applied approach should allow one to boost the spectrally integrated concentration factors to more than 100 by further improving light trapping and/or increasing Q LSC .

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