U.S. Department of Energy - Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
Federal Energy Management Program
New Solar Cell Breaks 40 Percent Efficiency Barrier
December 5, 2006
DOE announced on December 5th that Spectrolab, Inc. has developed a new
concentrator solar cell with a sunlight-to-electricity conversion
efficiency of 40.7 percent, a new world record in solar cell
efficiency. The new cell uses a "multi-junction" structure, in which
several layers each capture part of the sunlight passing through the
cell. These layers allow the cell to capture more of the solar
spectrum and convert it into electricity. The Spectrolab cell relies
on an optical concentrator to focus sunlight onto the cell.
Researchers have been working toward the "40 percent barrier" for the
past two decades. In the 1980s, multi-junction solar cells achieved
about 16 percent efficiency, and DOE's National Renewable Energy
Laboratory broke the 30 percent barrier in 1994. Today, most
satellites use these multi-junction solar cells, and Spectrolab, a
subsidiary of The Boeing Company, recently produced its two millionth
solar cell using multi-junction technology. The new Spectrolab cell,
developed with DOE funding, could lead to more affordable solar power
systems here on Earth, costing as little as $3 per watt to install and
producing electricity at a cost of 8 to 10 cents per kilowatt-hour. See
the press releases from DOE
and Spectrolab.
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