
Beyond details on the new efficiency record, this Solar Love repost below includes a bit more info on different types of solar cells, in case you are not aware of these differences and are now curious.
Sharp has a long string of solar cell efficiency records. And it has just extended that string a little further.
In 2009, Sharp landed a 35.8% triple-junction, non-concentrator solar cell efficiency record. It then went on to break that record a couple more times — with others breaking it as well. Up until recently, that record sat at 37.8%, and Boeing-Spectrolab was the record holder. But Sharp now reports that it has increased its cell efficiency from 37.7% (the record before Boeing-Spectrolab came along) to 37.9%. The efficiency record has been verified by National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST).
So, Sharp is in the lead again.
If you don’t follow such technology closely, let me quickly explain what a couple of these key terms mean. Conventional solar cells are “single-junction” solar cells, so they are just tuned to one wavelength of light. That greatly limits the efficiency of the solar cells. “Multi-junction” solar cells (in this case, triple-junction solar cells) add junctions using different materials in order to capture more wavelengths of light.
Of course, this has drawbacks — it’s more expensive and more difficult, for example — but it can considerably increase solar cell efficiency. As you can see in this NREL graph on solar cell efficiencies, multi-junction solar cells rule the roost when it comes to efficiency (note: the graph doesn’t yet include Sharp’s new record):
The other key point I noted above was that the solar cell efficiency record was for “non-concentrator” solar cells. Beyond adding junctions, one can increase the efficiency of a solar cell by concentrating light. As you can see in the graph above, the highest-efficiency solar cells are multi-junction solar cells that also benefit from concentration. Incidentally, Sharp also tied the solar cell efficiency record for this higher category last year, reaching 43.5%, a record which Solar Junction had already set, and which it has now risen to 44%.
Interesting stuff, eh? For more fun learning about solar records, check out:
- Black Silicon Solar Cell Efficiency Record Broken
- Thin Film Silicon Solar Cells Reach New World Record Efficiency Of 10.7%
- New Thin-Film Solar Cell Efficiency Record Set, 20.4%
- Alta Devices Lands 30.8% Solar Cell Efficiency Record
- Amonix Breaks Another World Record For PV Module Efficiency
- SunPower Tops Solar Module Yield Test (Ranks #1, #2, And #3)
- SunPower Launches Commercial Solar Panels With World Record Efficiency — X-Series
- First Solar Crushes Thin-Film Efficiency Record, Acquires TetraSun (& Stock Surges)
- Panasonic Claims Solar Cell Efficiency Record Of 24.7%
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