| Literature DB >> 21978732 |
Peter Bermel1, Michael Ghebrebrhan, Michael Harradon, Yi Xiang Yeng, Ivan Celanovic, John D Joannopoulos, Marin Soljacic.
Abstract
Selective solar absorbers generally have limited effectiveness in unconcentrated sunlight, because of reradiation losses over a broad range of wavelengths and angles. However, metamaterials offer the potential to limit radiation exchange to a proscribed range of angles and wavelengths, which has the potential to dramatically boost performance. After globally optimizing one particular class of such designs, we find thermal transfer efficiencies of 78% at temperatures over 1,000°C, with overall system energy conversion efficiencies of 37%, exceeding the Shockley-Quiesser efficiency limit of 31% for photovoltaic conversion under unconcentrated sunlight. This represents a 250% increase in efficiency and 94% decrease in selective emitter area compared to a standard, angular-insensitive selective absorber.PACS: 42.70.Qs; 81.05.Xj; 78.67.Pt; 42.79.Ek.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21978732 PMCID: PMC3228606 DOI: 10.1186/1556-276X-6-549
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Figure 1Diagram of angle-selective solar thermophotovoltaic system.
Figure 2For an ideal solar TPV system with unwanted emissivity : a system efficiency versus δ and b area ratio for selective emitter to selective absorber versus δ.
Figure 3Solar TPV system efficiency: a without angular selectivity, b with optimized angular selectivity of functional form given in Equation 5.
Figure 4Schematic diagram of the emissivity as a function of angle for all wavelengths.
Figure 5Solar TPV system efficiency as a function of operating temperature for germanium and silicon with unconcentrated sunlight. Both can exceed the Shockley-Quiesser limit at certain operating temperatures.
Figure 6Emissivity spectra for 2D periodic arrays of cylindrical holes in single crystal tungsten at various angles (. Notice that the average emissivity gradually decreases with increasing angle away from normal incidence.