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Featured researches published by Richard R. King.


Applied Physics Letters | 2007

40% efficient metamorphic GaInP∕GaInAs∕Ge multijunction solar cells

Richard R. King; D.C. Law; Kenneth M. Edmondson; Christopher M. Fetzer; Geoffrey S. Kinsey; Hojun Yoon; Raed A. Sherif; Nasser H. Karam

An efficiency of 40.7% was measured and independently confirmed for a metamorphic three-junction GaInP∕GaInAs∕Ge cell under the standard spectrum for terrestrial concentrator solar cells at 240 suns (24.0W∕cm2, AM1.5D, low aerosol optical depth, 25°C). This is the initial demonstration of a solar cell with over 40% efficiency, and is the highest solar conversion efficiency yet achieved for any type of photovoltaic device. Lattice-matched concentrator cells have now reached 40.1% efficiency. Electron-hole recombination mechanisms are analyzed in metamorphic GaxIn1−xAs and GaxIn1−xP materials, and fundamental power losses are quantified to identify paths to still higher efficiencies.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2009

III-V multijunction solar cells for concentrating photovoltaics

H. Cotal; Chris Fetzer; Joseph Boisvert; Geoffrey S. Kinsey; Richard R. King; Peter Hebert; Hojun Yoon; Nasser H. Karam

Concerns about the changing environment and fossil fuel depletion have prompted much controversy and scrutiny. One way to address these issues is to use concentrating photovoltaics (CPV) as an alternate source for energy production. Multijunction solar cells built from III–V semiconductors are being evaluated globally in CPV systems designed to supplement electricity generation for utility companies. The high efficiency of III–V multijunction concentrator cells, with demonstrated efficiency over 40% since 2006, strongly reduces the cost of CPV systems, and makes III–V multijunction cells the technology of choice for most concentrator systems today. In designing multijunction cells, consideration must be given to the epitaxial growth of structures so that the lattice parameter between material systems is compatible for enhancing device performance. Low resistance metal contacts are crucial for attaining high performance. Optimization of the front metal grid pattern is required to maximize light absorption and minimize I2R losses in the gridlines and the semiconductor sheet. Understanding how a multijunction device works is important for the design of next-generation high efficiency solar cells, which need to operate in the 45%–50% range for a CPV system to make better economical sense. However, the survivability of solar cells in the field is of chief concern, and accelerated tests must be conducted to assess the reliability of devices during operation in CPV systems. These topics are the focus of this review.


Applied Physics Letters | 2001

Structural changes during annealing of GaInAsN

Sarah Kurtz; J. Webb; Lynn Gedvilas; D. J. Friedman; J. F. Geisz; J. M. Olson; Richard R. King; D. Joslin; Nasser H. Karam

The alloy GaInAsN has great potential as a lower-band-gap material lattice matched to GaAs, but there is little understanding of what causes its poor optoelectronic properties and why these improve with annealing. This study provides information about the structural changes that occur when GaInAsN is annealed. The Fourier transform infrared spectra exhibit two primary features: a triplet at ∼470 cm−1 (Ga–N stretch) and two or three bands at ∼3100 cm−1 (N–H stretch). The change in the Ga–N stretch absorption can be explained if the nitrogen environment is converted from NGa4 to NInGa3 after annealing. The N–H stretch is also changed after annealing, implying a second, and unrelated, structural change.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2002

Numerical modeling of highly doped Si:P emitters based on Fermi-Dirac statistics and self-consistent material parameters

Pietro P. Altermatt; Jürgen O. Schumacher; Andres Cuevas; Mark Kerr; Stefan W. Glunz; Richard R. King; Gernot Heiser; Andreas Schenk

P.P.A. is on a Postdoctoral Fellowship from the Australian Research Council ~ARC!. The Center for Photovoltaic Engineering is supported by ARC’s Special Research Centres Scheme. A.C. and M.K. also acknowledge funding by the ARC.


photovoltaic specialists conference | 2002

High-efficiency space and terrestrial multijunction solar cells through bandgap control in cell structures

Richard R. King; Chris Fetzer; Peter C. Colter; Ken Edmondson; James H. Ermer; H. Cotal; Hojun Yoon; Alex Stavrides; Geoff Kinsey; Dimitri D. Krut; Nasser H. Karam

Using the energy bandgap of semiconductors as a design parameter is critically important for achieving the highest efficiency multijunction solar cells. The bandgaps of lattice-matched semiconductors that are most convenient to use are rarely those which would result in the highest theoretical efficiency. For both the space and terrestrial solar spectra, the efficiency of 3-junction GaInP/GaAs/Ge solar cells can be increased by a lower bandgap middle cell, as for GaInAs middle cells, as well as by using higher bandgap top cell materials. Wide-bandgap and indirect-gap materials used in parasitically absorbing layers such as tunnel junctions help to increase transmission of light to the active cell layers beneath. Control of bandgap in such cell structures has been instrumental in achieving solar cell efficiencies of 29.7% under the AMO space spectrum (0.1353 W/cm/sup 2/, 28/spl deg/C) and 34% under the concentrated terrestrial spectrum (AM1.5G, 150-400 suns, 25/spl deg/C), the highest yet achieved for solar cells built on a single substrate.


photovoltaic specialists conference | 2000

Next-generation, high-efficiency III-V multijunction solar cells

Richard R. King; Nasser H. Karam; J.H. Ermer; N. Haddad; Peter C. Colter; T. Isshiki; Hojun Yoon; H. Cotal; David E. Joslin; Dmitri D. Krut; Rengarajan Sudharsanan; Kenneth M. Edmondson; B.T. Cavicchi; D.R. Lillington

Next-generation solar cell approaches such as AlGaInP/GaAs/GaInNAs/Ge 4-junction cells, lattice-mismatched GaInP/GaInAs/Ge, concentrator cells, and improved 3-junction device structures hold the promise of greater efficiency than even todays highly successful multijunction cells. Wide-bandgap tunnel junctions, improved heterointerfaces, and other device structure improvements have resulted in several record-efficiency GaInP/GaAs/Ge cell results. Triple-junction (3J) cells grown in this work have demonstrated 29.3% efficiency for space (AMO, 1 sun). Space concentrator 3J cells have efficiency up to 30.0% at low concentration (AMO, 7.6 suns), and terrestrial concentrator cells grown at Spectrolab and processed at NREL have reached 32.3% (AM1.5D, 440 suns).


IEEE Journal of Photovoltaics | 2014

Direct Semiconductor Bonded 5J Cell for Space and Terrestrial Applications

Philip T. Chiu; D.C. Law; Robyn L. Woo; S.B. Singer; D. Bhusari; William Hong; A. Zakaria; Joseph Boisvert; Shoghig Mesropian; Richard R. King; Nasser H. Karam

Spectrolab has demonstrated a 2.2/1.7/1.4/1.05/0.73 eV 5J cell with an efficiency of 37.8% under 1 sun AM1.5G spectrum and 35.1% efficiency for 1 sun AM0. The top three junctions and bottom two junctions were grown on GaAs and InP substrates, respectively, by metal organic vapor phase epitaxy. The GaAs- and InP-based cells were then direct bonded to create a low-resistance, high-transmissive interface. Both the space and terrestrial cells have high 1 sun Voc between 4.75 and 4.78 V. Initial tests of the terrestrial cells at concentration are promising with efficiencies increasing up to 10× concentration to a maximum value close to 41%.


Applied Physics Letters | 2008

GaInP∕GaAs dual junction solar cells on Ge∕Si epitaxial templates

Melissa Archer; Daniel C. Law; Shoghig Mesropian; Moran Haddad; Christopher M. Fetzer; Arthur C. Ackerman; Corinne Ladous; Richard R. King; Harry A. Atwater

In this study, we report synthesis of large area (≫ 2 cm2) crack-free GaInP/GaAs double junction solar cells on 50 mm diameter Ge/Si templates fabricated using wafer bonding and ion implantation induced layer transfer techniques. Defect removal from the template film and film surface prior to epitaxial growth was found to be critical to achievement of high open circuit voltage and efficiency. Cells grown on templates prepared with chemical mechanical polishing in addition a wet chemical etch show comparable performance to control devices grown on bulk Ge substrates. Current-voltage (I–V) data under AM 1.5 illumination indicate that the short circuit current is comparable in templated and control cells, but the open circuit voltage is slightly lower (2.08V vs. 2.16V). Spectral response measurements indicate a drop in open circuit voltage due to a slight lowering of the top GaInP cell band gap. The drop in band gap is due to a difference in the indium composition in the two samples caused by the different miscut (9° vs. 6°) of the two kinds of substrates.


Advances in Optoelectronics | 2007

Advances in High-Efficiency III-V Multijunction Solar Cells

Richard R. King; Daniel C. Law; Kenneth M. Edmondson; Christopher M. Fetzer; Geoffrey S. Kinsey; Hojun Yoon; Dimitri D. Krut; James H. Ermer; Raed A. Sherif; Nasser H. Karam

The high efficiency of multijunction concentrator cells has the potential to revolutionize the cost structure of photovoltaic electricity generation. Advances in the design of metamorphic subcells to reduce carrier recombination and increase voltage, wide-band-gap tunnel junctions capable of operating at high concentration, metamorphic buffers to transition from the substrate lattice constant to that of the epitaxial subcells, concentrator cell AR coating and grid design, and integration into 3-junction cells with current-matched subcells under the terrestrial spectrum have resulted in new heights in solar cell performance. A metamorphic Ga 0 .44 In 0 .56 P / Ga 0.92 In 0.08 As/ Ge 3-junction solar cell from this research has reached a record 40.7% efficiency at 240 suns, under the standard reporting spectrum for terrestrial concentrator cells (AM1.5 direct, low-AOD, 24.0 W/cm 2 , 25 ∘ C ), and experimental lattice-matched 3-junction cells have now also achieved over 40% efficiency, with 40.1% measured at 135 suns. This metamorphic 3-junction device is the first solar cell to reach over 40% in efficiency, and has the highest solar conversion efficiency for any type of photovoltaic cell developed to date. Solar cells with more junctions offer the potential for still higher efficiencies to be reached. Four-junction cells limited by radiative recombination can reach over 58% in principle, and practical 4-junction cell efficiencies over 46% are possible with the right combination of band gaps, taking into account series resistance and gridline shadowing. Many of the optimum band gaps for maximum energy conversion can be accessed with metamorphic semiconductor materials. The lower current in cells with 4 or more junctions, resulting in lower I 2 R resistive power loss, is a particularly significant advantage in concentrator PV systems. Prototype 4-junction terrestrial concentrator cells have been grown by metal-organic vapor-phase epitaxy, with preliminary measured efficiency of 35.7% under the AM1.5 direct terrestrial solar spectrum at 256 suns.


photovoltaic specialists conference | 2000

Triple-junction solar cell efficiencies above 32%: the promise and challenges of their application in high-conceniration-ratio PV systems

H. Cotal; D.R. Lillington; J.H. Ermer; Richard R. King; Nasser H. Karam; Sarah Kurtz; D. J. Friedman; J. M. Olson; J.S. Ward; A. Duda; Keith Emery; T. Moriarty

Results from Spectrolab-grown Ga/sub 0.5/In/sub 0.5/P/GaAs/Ge structures optimized for the AM1.5D spectrum are described along with progress toward developing next generation multijunction solar cells for high concentration ratios (X). The epitaxially-grown layers were processed into triple junction cells both at Spectrolab and NREL, and I-V tested vs. X. Cells were tested with efficiencies as high as 32.4% near 372 suns. The FF limited the performance with increasing X as a result of the increased role of the series resistance. The V/sub oc/ vs. X showed its log-linear dependence on I/sub sc/ over 1000 suns. Based on cell improvements for space applications, multijunction cells appear to be ideal candidates for high efficiency, cost effective, PV concentrator systems. Future development of new 1 eV materials for space cells, and further reduction in Ge wafer costs, promises to achieve cells with efficiencies >40% that cost

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Peter C. Colter

North Carolina State University

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