Quantum dot solar concentrators for building integrated photovoltaics

Contact: André Kostro, Andreas Schueler

Concentration of solar radiation is an effective way to reduce cost in solar electricity generation. While direct sunlight can be concentrated easily by mirrors in solar power plants located in sunny countries, there are not many options to concentrate diffuse solar radiation, the latter occurring frequently in central European latitudes.

Fluorescent concentrators for photovoltaic solar energy conversion use fluorescence combined with total internal reflection (TIR) to concentrate not only direct but also diffuse solar radiation to a considerable extend. A schematic drawing of this principle is shown in Fig.1(a). Hereby the energy collected on a large surface can be concentrated on a relatively small area of photovoltaic cells located at the edge of a fluorescent glass pane.

We used this principle with photoluminescent semiconductor nanocrystals, also called quantum dots. Instead of immersing quantum dots in transparent resins, we propose to deposit quantum dot containing silicon dioxide films on highly transparent low iron glass substrates by sol-gel dip-coating. Unlike the organic dyes, quantum dots have the advantage not to be sensible to UV radiation and offer durable performance.

A computer code for ray tracing simulations of quantum dot solar concentrators has been developed at LESO-PB on the basis of Monte Carlo methods. Random events model the wavelength dependent behaviour for polarization dependent reflection/transmission at interfaces, photon absorption by the semiconductor nanocrystals and photoluminescent reemission.

Publications

A. Schueler, A. Kostro, B. Huriet, C. Galande and J.-L. Scartezzini. Monte Carlo simulations of quantum dot solar concentrators: ray tracing based on fluorescence mapping. SPIE, Optics and Photonics 2008, San Diego, 2008.

A. Schueler, A. Kostro, C. Galande, del Olmo and M. Valle et al. Principles of Monte-Carlo ray-tracing simulations of quantum dot solar concentrators. Solar World Congress of the International-Solar-Energy-Society, Beijing, PEOPLES R CHINA, 2007.

A. Schueler, M. Python, M. Valle del Olmo and E. de Chambrier. Quantum dot containing nanocomposite thin films for photoluminescent solar concentrators, in Solar Energy, vol. 81, num. 9, p. 1159-1165, 2007.

 

diagram showing path of solar radiation graph showing solar radian path

Fig.1: (a) Quantum dots immersed in bulk of panes (b) Quantum dots contained within coatings deposited on the surfaces (b). (Illustration from Goetzberger A., Greube W., Solar energy conversion with fluorescent collectors, Applied Physics 14 (2), pp.123-139).

 

samples at different annealing temperatures   ray tracing

Fig. 2: (left) Photograph of CdS nanocrystal containing SiO2 coatings on glass; samples were annealed at 250°C, 350°C, and 450°C [3]. (right) Visualization of three-dimensional photon trajectories in a triple stack quantum dot concentrator [4].