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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
221

Fabrication and Characterization of Nanowires and Quantum Dots for Advanced Solar Cell Architectures

Sadeghimakki, Bahareh January 2012 (has links)
The commercially available solar cells suffer from low conversion efficiency due to the thermalization and transmission losses arising from the mismatch between the band gap of the semiconductor materials and the solar spectrum. Advanced device architectures based on nanomaterial have been proposed and being successfully used to enhance the efficiency of the solar cells. Quantum dots (QDs) and nanowires (NWs) are the nanosclae structures that have been exploited for the development of the third generation solar cell devices and nanowire based solar cells, respectively. The optical and electrical properties of these materials can be tuned by their size and geometry; hence they have great potential for the production of highly efficient solar cell. Application of QDs and NWs with enhanced optoelectronic properties and development of low-cost fabrication processes render a new generation of economic highly efficient PV devices. The most significant contribution of this PhD study is the development of simple and cost effective methods for fabrication of nanowires and quantum dots for advanced solar cell architectures. In advanced silicon nanowires (SiNWs) array cell, SiNWs have been widely synthesised by the well-known vapor-liquid-solid method. Electron beam lithography and deep reactive ion etching have also been employed for fabrication of SiNWs. Due to the high price and complexity of these methods, simple and cost effective approaches are needed for the fabrication of SiNWs. In another approach, to enhance the cell efficiency, organic dyes and polymers have been widely used as luminescent centers and host mediums in the luminescent down shifting (LDS) layers. However, due to the narrow absorption band of the dyes and degradation of the polymers by moisture and heat, these materials are not promising candidates to use as LDS. Highly efficient luminescent materials and transparent host materials with stable mechanical properties are demanded for luminescent down shifting applications. In this project, simple fabrication processes were developed to produce SiNWs and QDs for application in advanced cell architectures. The SiNWs array were successfully fabricated, characterized and deployed in new cell architectures with radial p-n junction geometry. The luminescence down shifting of layers containing QDs in oxide and glass mediums was verified. The silica coated quantum dots which are suitable for luminescence down shifting, were also fabricated and characterized for deployment in new design architectures. Silicon nanowires were fabricated using two simplified methods. In the first approach, a maskless reactive ion etching process was developed to form upright ordered arrays of the SiNWs without relying on the complicated nano-scale lithography or masking methods. The fabricated structures were comprehensively characterized. Light trapping and photoluminescence properties of the medium were verified. In the second approach, combination of the nanosphere lithography and etching techniques were utilized for wire formation. This method provides a better control on the wire diameters and geometries in a very simple and cost effective way. The fabricated silicon nanowires were used for formation of the radial p-n junction array cells. The functionality of the new cell structures were confirmed through experimental and simulation results. Quantum dots are promising candidates as luminescent centers due to their tunable optical properties. Oxide/glass matrices are also preferred as the host medium for QDs because of their robust mechanical properties and their compatibility with standard silicon processing technology. Besides, the oxide layers are transparent mediums with good passivation and anti-reflection coating properties. They can also be used to encapsulate the cell. In this work, ordered arrays of QDs were incorporated in an oxide layer to form a luminescent down shifting layer. This design benefits from the enhanced absorption of a periodic QD structure in a transparent oxide. The down shifting properties of the layer after deployment on a crystalline silicon solar cell were examined. For this purpose, crystalline silicon solar cells were fabricated to use as test platform for down shifting. In order to examine the down-shifting effect, different approaches for formation of a luminescence down shifting layer were developed. The LDS layer consist of cadmium selenide- zinc sulfide (CdSe/ZnS) quantum dots in oxide and glass layers to act as luminescent centers and transparent host medium, respectively. The structural and optical properties of the fabricated layers were studied. The concept of spectral engineering was proved by the deployment of the layer on the solar cell. To further benefit from the LDS technique, quantum efficiency of the QDs and optical properties of the layer must be improved. Demand for the high quantum efficiency material with desired geometry leaded us to synthesis quantum dots coated with a layer of grown oxide. As the luminescence quantum efficiency of the QDs is correlated to the surface defects, one advantage of having oxide on the outer shell of the QDs, is to passivate the surface non-radiative recombination centers and produce QDs with high luminescent quantum yield. In addition, nanoparticles with desired size can be obtained only by changing the thickness of the oxide shell. This method also simplifies the fabrication of QD arrays for luminescence down shifting application, since it is easier to form ordered arrays from larger particles. QD superlattices in an oxide medium can be fabricated on a large area by a simple spin-coating or dip coating methods. The photonic crystal properties of the proposed structure can greatly increase the absorption in the QDs layer and enhance the effect of down shifting.
222

Hydrogenated polymorphous silicon: establishing the link between hydrogen microstructure and irreversible solar cell kinetics during light soaking

Kim, Ka-Hyun 09 October 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Cette thèse est consacrée au silicium polymorphe hydrogéné (pm-Si:H). Elle porte tout d'abord sur une étude du pm-Si :H puis sur une étude des cellules photovoltaïques fabriquées à partir de ce matériau. Le pm-Si:H est formé de couches minces nanostructurées et peut être déposé par PECVD conventionnelle. Les effets des différents paramètres de dépôt (mélanges gazeux, pression, puissance RF, température du substrat) sur les propriétés du matériau ont été étudiés pour optimiser sa qualité. La caractérisation des couches a été un enjeu primordial. Pour cela, nous avons choisi de combiner une palette très large de méthodes de caractérisation (ellipsomètrie spectroscopique, exodiffusion d'hydrogène, SIMS, FTIR, AFM, etc...). A cause de la contribution des nanoparticules de silicium dans le plasma, la nature du dépôt du pm-Si:H montre la différence contrairement au a-Si:H pour lequel le dépôt se fait par le biais de radicaux ionisés. L'étude des conditions du procédé nous a conduit à fabriquer des cellules solaires d'un rendement initial de 9.22 % avec un facteur de forme élevé (74.1), mais aussi de démontrer des effets de vieillissement inhabituels, tels que i) une dégradation initiale rapide, ii) une dégradation irréversible, et iii) de grands changements structuraux macroscopiques. Nous avons découvert que le principal problème se situe entre le substrat et la couche mince de silicium. L'hydrogène moléculaire diffuse et s'accumule à l'interface entre le substrat et la couche mince, ce qui introduit un délaminage local qui a pour conséquence une dégradation initiale rapide des performances des cellules. Nous avons trouvé que sous éclairement une structure PIN facilite l'accumulation d'hydrogène et le délaminage à l'interface entre le substrat et la couche dopée p. Cependant, l'utilisation d'une structure NIP empêche l'accumulation d'hydrogène et le délaminage. Cela nous a permis de fabriquer des cellules solaires pm-Si:H de structure NIP d'un rendement stable de 8.43 %, mais aussi de démontrer une degradation minimale (10 %) après un vieillissement de 500 heures.
223

Growth And Morphological Characterization Of Intrinsic Hydrogenated Amorphous Silicon Thin Film For A-si:h/c-si Heterojunction Solar Cells

Pehlivan, Ozlem 01 February 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Passivation of the crystalline silicon (c-Si) wafer surface and decreasing the number of interface defects are basic requirements for development of high efficiency a-Si:H/c-Si heterojunction solar cells. Surface passivation is generally achieved by development of detailed silicon wafer cleaning processes and the optimization of PECVD parameters for the deposition of intrinsic hydrogenated amorphous silicon layer. a-Si:H layers are grown in UHV-PECVD system. Solar cells were deposited on the p type Cz-silicon substrates in the structure of Al front contact/a-Si:H(n)/a-Si:H(i)/c-Si(p)/Al back contact. Solar cell parameters were determined under standard test conditions namely, using 1000 W/m2, AM 1.5G illumination at 25 oC. Growth of (i) a-Si:H, films on the clean wafer surface was investigated as a function of substrate temperature, RF power density, gas flow rate, hydrogen dilution ratio and deposition time and was characterized using SEM, HRTEM, AFM, SE, ATR-FTIR and I/V measurements. Structural properties of the films deposited on silicon wafer surface are directly effective on the solar cell efficiency. Morphological characterization of the grown films on the crystalline surface was found to be very complex depending on the deposition parameters and may even change during the deposition time. At 225 oC substrate temperature, at the beginning of the deposition, (i) a-Si:H films was found grown in epitaxial structure, followed by a simultaneous growth of crystalline and amorphous structure, and finally transforming to complete amorphous structure. Despite this complex structure, an efficiency of 9.2% for solar cells with total area of 72 cm2 was achieved. In this cell structure, TCO and back surface passivation do not exist. In the
224

Solar energy production at Heby Skola : A pilot study of a photovoltaic installation in Sweden

Aronsson, Oscar, Nyqvist, Daniel, Robertsson, Simon January 2013 (has links)
Photovoltaic is a renewable energy technology that creates electricity by converting the energy of light. Photovoltaics are usually installed on buildings. In this pilot study, the viability of such an installation on the roof of the school Heby skola is examined with respect to produced electricity, economic potential and environmental impact. This is done with the software Solelekonomi, together with 11-years of solar irradiance data and measurements of the properties of the intended roof, which made it was possible to simulate the production patterns of a photovoltaic system. The simulations were made on two possible system sizes 50 m2 and 200 m2 with respectively 7.75 and 31 kWpeak installed power. Among other things, the results showed that 1.1% and 4.45% of the total electricity consumption could be replaced by the systems. A PV investment was found to be a good option with respect to the sections examined. Furthermore, considering PVinstallations, the school was found to be representative for schools in Sweden, and thus this essay can provide a basis for other PV pilot project on Swedish schools.
225

Development of a model for physical and economical optimization of distributed PV systems

Näsvall, David January 2013 (has links)
There are a number of factors that influence both the physical and the economical performance of a photovoltaic solar energy (PV) installation. The aim of this project was to develop a simulation and optimization model with which these factors could be analyzed and the PV installation optimized. By supplying the model with meteorological data, electricity consumption data and available building surfaces the model finds the optimum PV installation. The output consists of both physical and economical performance as well as information on how to distribute and install the PV modules on the available building surfaces. The model was validated using annual and hourly measurement data from Swedish PV installations. The validation shows that the model is a reliable tool for simulating the electricity generation from a PV system. In the second part of the project the model was used to evaluate the PV potential at two different hospitals and one health care center within the Uppsala County, Sweden. The model was also used to study the effect of different house orientations on the PV potential in Swedish neighborhoods. The physical and economical PV potentials are high for the hospitals and the health carecenter. This is mainly due to a high electricity demand but also due to a good match between the load profile and the PV electricity generation profile. The study on different neighborhoods shows that for gable roof buildings it might be more favorable to plan the houses so that the roofs face east-west rather than north-south. / Det är många faktorer som påverkar de fysikaliska och ekonomiska resultaten av en planerad solcellsinstallation. Syftet med det här projektet var att utveckla en simulerings- och optimeringsmodell med vars hjälp det skulle gå att analysera dessa frågor och hitta det bästa installationsalternativet i varje enskilt fall. Modellen som togs fram i detta projekt kan både studera ett givet installationsalternativ och räkna ut den mest optimala installationen utifrån de av användaren specificerade målen och begränsningarna. För att kunna göra detta behöver modellen förses med meteorologiska data för den aktuella platsen, elkonsumtionsdata från det aktuella objektet samt mått och orienteringar för de tillgängliga byggnadsytorna. Dessutom behöver användaren ange vissa ekonomiska parametrar såsom exempelvis avbetalningstid, ränta och aktuellt solcellspris. Resultatet från modellen består av både fysikaliska och ekonomiska resultat, exempelvis timvis nettoflöde av elektricitet, avbetalningstid och genomsnittligt elpris från solcellssystemet. I optimeringsresultatet redovisas hur solcellerna bör fördelas och installeras på de olika byggnadsytorna för att ge bäst resultat enligt målspecifikationen. För att validera modellen jämfördes dess simuleringsresultat med årliga och timvisa mätvärden från svenska solcellsanläggningar. Dessutom jämfördes modellens resultat med motsvarande resultat från andra simuleringsverktyg för solceller. Valideringsresultaten visar att modellen är ett pålitligt verktyg för att simulera elgenereringen från solcellsystem med olika moduler, växelriktare och installationssätt. Som ett delresultat vid modellutvecklingen simulerades ett stort antal olika solcellssystempå platta och svagt lutande tak. Utifrån dessa simuleringar utformades ett antal tumregler för hur uppvinklade moduler på platta eller svagt lutande tak skall monteras. Tumreglerna visar vilket avstånd mellan modulraderna och vilken vinkel på modulerna som ger den högsta taktäckningsgarden (största installationen) vid olika övre gränser för de interna skuggningsförlusterna. I projektets andra del användes modellen för att utvärdera solcellspotentialen på Akademiska sjukhuset, Enköpings lasarett och Tierps vårdcentral. Resultaten som levererades till Landstinget i Uppsala län visar att både den tekniska och den ekonomiska solcellspotentialen är stor på dessa enheter. Huvudanledning till den höga potentialen är att elbehovet är väldigt stort på dessa enheter samt att solcellernas elgenereringsprofil stämmer mycket väl överens med när elbehovet är som störst. Modellen användes även för att studera hur olika byggnadsorienteringar påverkar solcellspotentialen i olika tänkbara svenska bostadsområden. De olika resultaten från dessa studier visar att det i många fall är bättre att orientera byggnader med sadeltak så att taken pekar i östlig och västlig riktning snarare än mot syd och nord. Därmed föreslås en översyn avde nu rådande rekommendationerna att optimera huvudorienteringarna av taken mod syd vid detaljplanering av stadsdelar.
226

Growth of Zinc Oxide Nanoparticles on Top of Polymers and Organic Small Molecules as a Transparent Cathode in Tandem Photovoltaic Device

Al Kadi Jazairli, Mohamad January 2008 (has links)
Organic solar cells have caught considerable attention in the past few years due to their potential for providing environmentally safe, flexible, lightweight, inexpensive, and roll-to-roll feasible production solar cells. However, the efficiency achieved in current organic solar cells is quite low, yet quick and successive improvements render it as a promising alternative. A hopeful approach to improve the efficiency is by exploiting the tandem concept which consists of stacking two or more organic solar cells in series. One important constituent in tandem solar cells is the middle electrode layer which is transparent and functions as a cathode for the first cell and an anode for the second cell. Most studies done so far have employed noble metals such as gold or silver as the middle electrode layer; however, they suffered from several shortcomings especially with respect to reproducibility. This thesis focuses on studying a new trend which employs an oxide material based on nano-particles as a transparent cathode (such as Zinc-oxide-nano-particles) along with a transparent anode so as to replace the middle electrode. Thus, this work presents a study on solution processable zinc oxide (ZnO) nanostructures, their proper handling techniques, and their potential as a middle electrode material in Tandem solar cells in many different configurations involving both polymer and small molecule materials. Moreover, the ZnO-np potential as a candidate for acceptor material is also investigated.
227

Studies of Inverted Organic Solar Cells Fabricated by Doctor Blading Technique

Tang, Zheng January 2010 (has links)
Over the last few decades, bulk-heterojunction organic photovoltaic devices comprising an intimately mixed donor-acceptor blend have gained serious attention due to their potential for being cheap, light weight, flexible and environmentally friendly. In this thesis, APFO-3/PCBM bulk-heterojunction based organic photovoltaic devices with an inverted layer sequence were investigated systematically. Doctor blade coating is a technique that is roll-to-roll compatible and cost efficient and has been used to fabricate the solar cells. Initial studies focused on optimization of the electrodes. A thin film of the conductive polymer PEDOT:PSS was chosen to be the transparent anode. Different PEDOT:PSS films with respect to the film thickness and deposition temperature were characterized in terms of conductivity and transmission. Decent conductance and transmittance were obtained in the films deposited with wet film thickness setting of 35 μm, The cathode was fabricated from a metal bilayer comprising Al and Ti with an area about 1 cm2, and the best-working cathodes contained a 70 nm thick Al layer covered by a thin Ti layer of about 10 -15 nm. Optimized coating temperature and wet film thickness settings for the active layer and PEDOT:PSS layer were experimentally determined. The highest efficiency of the APFO-3/PCBM based inverted solar cells fabricated by doctor blading was 0.69%, which exceeded the efficiency of spin-coated inverted cells. A higher efficiency (0.8 %) was achieved by adding a small amount of high molecular weight polystyrene to the active layer. Morphological changes after adding of the polystyrene were observed by optical microscopy and AFM. A coating temperature dependent phase separation of the APFO-3/PCBM/polystyrene blend was found.
228

Automated Simulation of Organic Photovoltaic Solar Cells / Analytical Tool for Organic Photovoltaic Solar Cells

Pendyala, Raghu Kishore January 2008 (has links)
This project is an extension of a pre-existing simulation program (‘Simulation_2dioden’). This simulation program was first developed in Konarka Technologies. The main purpose of the project ‘Simulation_2dioden’ is to calibrate the values of different parameters like, Shunt resistance, Series resistance, Ideality factor, Diode current, epsilon, tau, contact probability, AbsCT, intensity, etc; This is one of the curve fitting procedure’s. This calibration is done by using different equations. Diode equation is one of the main equation’s used in calculating different currents and voltages, from the values generated by diode equation all the other parameters are calculated. The reason for designing this simulation_2dioden is to calculate the values of different parameters of a device and the researcher would know which parameter effects more in the device efficiency, accordingly they change the composition of the materials used in the device to acquire a better efficiency. The platform used to design this project is ‘Microsoft Excel’, and the tool used to design the program is ‘Visual basics’. The program could be otherwise called as a ‘Virtual Solar cell’. The whole Virtual Solar cell is programmed in a single excel sheet. An Automated working solution is suggested which could save a lot of time for the researchers, which is the main aim of this project. To calibrate the parameter values, one has to load the J-V characteristics and simulate the program by just clicking one button. And the parameters extracted by using this automated simulation are Parallel resistance, Series resistance, Diode ideality, Saturation current, Contact properties, and Charge carrier mobility. Finally, a basic working solution has been initiated by automating the simulation program for calibrating the parameter values.
229

Quasi-solid state electrolytes of Ionic liquid crystal apply in Dye-Sensitized Solar Cell.

Guo, Tai-lin 17 July 2010 (has links)
A novel ionic liquid crystal (ILC) system (C18IMCNBr) with a liquid crystal alignment used as an electrolyte for a dye-sensitized solar cell (DSSC) showed the higher short-circuit current density (Jsc) and the higher light-to-electricity conversion efficiency than the system using the non- alignment liquid crystalline ionic liquid (C18IMCNBr),due to the higher conductivity of liquid crystal alignment. The larger Jsc and efficiency value of liquid crystal alignment supported that the higher conductivity of liquid crystal alignment is attributed to the enhancement of the exchange reaction between iodide species. As a result of formation of the two-dimensional electron conductive pathways organized by the localized I3- and I- at liquid crystal alignment layers, the concentration of polyiodide species exemplified by Im- (m =5,7, ...) was higher in alignment C18IMCNBr. However, in the two-dimensional electron conductive pathways of C18IMCNBr, more collision frequencies between iodide species (I-,I3-, and Im-) could be achieved than that in the three-dimensional space of C18IMCNBr, which could lead to the promotion of the exchange reaction between iodide species, the contribution of a two-dimensional structure of the conductive pathway through the increase of collision frequency between iodide species was proposed.
230

Application of Organic Optoelectronic Materials and Flexible Electronics

Lee, Chun-Che 14 December 2010 (has links)
We proposed a flexible electronics with functional poly (arylene ether)s and discotic liquid crystal. Firstly, we provided a series of the PAE polymer with remarkable thermal stability and high optical transmittance. The PAEs were synthesized via nucleophilic displacement as polymerization on a 2-trifluoromethyl-activated bisfluoro monomer, which reacted with bisphenols. Thermal analysis indicated the PAEs possessed a high glass transition point of ~300¢J and the decomposition temperature Td=500¢J at a weight loss of 5%. Additionally, high transmittance of 85%, low dielectric constant of ~2.0, and well mechanical property of the PAE films were experimentally verified, as a high potential substrate for flexible electronics. Two kind of device structure has been prepared, were organic thin film solar cell and Dye sensitized solar cell. Furthermore, we provided the self-assembled triphenylene-based liquid crystal and its polymer derivative to apply for photovoltics. The 2, 3, 6, 7-tetra-6-octyloxydibenzo[a,c]phenazine-11-carboxylic group and the polymer of merging with disc-unit and polyacrylamide. Both show a highly isotropic phase transition point of ~270¢J and the decomposition temperature Td~450¢J at a weight loss of 5%. The specific absorption in visible light region was at 200 - 450 nm. A distinct self-arrangement of columnar array was investigated by optical textures. The self-arranged pathway enhanced carrier mobility due to £k-£k conjugation in hexagonal column stacking. Finally, the PAEs and DLC materials applied to thin film solar cell (ITO/PEDOT:PSS/DLC-PAM/P3HT:PCBM/Al) as hole transporting layer. The photo-conversion efficiency was strong depending on organic compounds, such as molecular structure, photo-physic and chemical properties. On the basis of integrated characteristics, it suggested a high potential as flexible electronics for photovoltics.

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