Beschreibung:
Photovoltaic systems enable the sun's energy to be converted directly into electricity using semiconductor solar cells. The ultimate goal of photovoltaic research and development is to reduce the cost of solar power to reach or even become lower than the cost of electricity generated from fossil and nuclear fuels. The power conversion efficiency and the cost per unit area of the phototvoltaic system are critical factors that determine the cost of photovoltaic electricity. Until recently,the power conversion efficiency of single-junction photovoltaic cells has been limited to approximately 33% - the so-called Shockley-Queisser limit.
Preface; Crystalline Silicon Solar Cells with High Efficiency; Tandem And Multiple-Junction Devices Based On Thin-Film Silicon Technology; Thin-Film CdTe Photovoltaic Solar Cell Devices; III-V Tandem Solar Cells for Concentrating Photovoltaics; Thin film PV based on earth-abundant materials; Chemistry of Organic Dyes for Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells; Perovskite Solar Cells; All-Oxide Photovoltaics; Active layer limitations and non-geminate recombination in polymer/fullerene; bulkheterojunction solar cells; Singlet Fission for Photovoltaics; Quantum Dot Solar Cells and Multiple Exciton Generation; Hot Carrier Solar Cells; Intermediate Band Solar Cells; Up and Down Conversion for Thin Film Solar Cells and Luminescent Concentrators based on Rare Earth Chromophores; Triplet-Triplet Annihilation Upconversion for Photovoltaics; Quantum Rectennas for Photovoltaics; Real World Efficiency Limits beyond Shockley-Queisser; Grid parity and its implications for energy policy and regulation