| Literature DB >> 35955273 |
Ntalane S Seroka1, Raymond Taziwa2, Lindiwe Khotseng1.
Abstract
The demand for energy has been a global concern over the years due to the ever increasing population which still generate electricity from non-renewable energy sources. Presently, energy produced worldwide is mostly from fossil fuels, which are non-renewable sources and release harmful by-products that are greenhouses gases. The sun is considered a source of clean, renewable energy, and the most abundant. With silicon being the element most used for the direct conversion of solar energy into electrical energy, solar cells are the technology corresponding to the solution of the problem of energy on our planet. Solar cell fabrication has undergone extensive study over the past several decades and improvement from one generation to another. The first solar cells were studied and grown on silicon wafers, in particular single crystals that formed silicon-based solar cells. With the further development in thin films, dye-sensitized solar cells and organic solar cells have significantly enhanced the efficiency of the cell. The manufacturing cost and efficiency hindered further development of the cell, although consumers still have confidence in the crystalline silicon material, which enjoys a fair share in the market for photovoltaics. This present review work provides niche and prominent features including the benefits and prospects of the first (mono-poly-crystalline silicon), second (amorphous silicon and thin films), and third generation (quantum dots, dye synthesized, polymer, and perovskite) of materials evolution in photovoltaics.Entities:
Keywords: photovoltaic; semiconductor; solar cells; thin films
Year: 2022 PMID: 35955273 PMCID: PMC9369979 DOI: 10.3390/ma15155338
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.748
Figure 1Presents electrical energy production for the next 6 decades (with consideration that the emission of CO2 will be held under 450 ppmv). Re-used with permission [5], Copyright © 2008 Elsevier.
Figure 2Schematic structure of typical a silicon solar cell [28].
Figure 3Illustrate the principle of charge separation within a solar cell [33].
Figure 4Represents a schematic current–voltage curve from a solar cell device black (dark) and red (under illumination) [36,37,38].
Figure 5Progress of perovskite solar cell efficiencies compared with other thin film PV technology, reused with permission from [39], Copyright © 2018 Elsevier.
Figure 6Schematic representation a (a) typical solar cell and (b) inverted solar cell architecture.