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Basic Research Needs for Solar Energy Utilization - Office of ...

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SOLAR ENERGY CONVERSION MATERIALS BY DESIGN<br />

Materials play a key role in various aspects <strong>of</strong> solar energy conversion. Presently available<br />

materials are generally deficient in per<strong>for</strong>mance, cost, stability, or some combination there<strong>of</strong>.<br />

New materials systems, guided by the interplay between rational design, high-throughput<br />

screening, and theory, are needed to improve the per<strong>for</strong>mance <strong>of</strong> light absorbers, photovoltaic<br />

materials and photoelectrodes, catalysts, thermoelectrics, and infrastructural aspects <strong>of</strong> solar<br />

energy conversion systems.<br />

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY<br />

Materials play a key role in solar energy conversion to electricity, fuels, and heat. Materials used<br />

in photovoltaics have traditionally been derived from research and development advances in<br />

other technology fields (e.g., Si from microelectronics industry, GaAs from optoelectronics<br />

industry), and as a result, the range <strong>of</strong> materials currently available <strong>for</strong> use in photovoltaics is<br />

highly limited compared to the enormous number <strong>of</strong> semiconductor materials that can in<br />

principle be synthesized <strong>for</strong> use in photovoltaics. Similarly, high-efficiency thermoelectric and<br />

thermophotovoltaic converters coupled to solar concentrators have the potential to generate<br />

electricity at converter efficiencies from 25 to 35%. Significant progress has been made in these<br />

areas over the last decade, particularly by exploiting nanoscience and nanotechnology. Further<br />

fundamental research can lead to cost-effective materials that enable efficient solar-thermal<br />

energy utilization systems, by developing thermoelectric materials with ZT up to 4, selective<br />

thermal emitters that can withstand >1,000°C, high thermal conductivity polymer-based<br />

materials, and new photovoltaic absorbers and transparent conductors. In order to identify<br />

materials that are ideally suited to solar energy conversion and storage applications, new<br />

experimental and theoretical methods are required that can rapidly assess and select promising<br />

materials from a very large number <strong>of</strong> candidates. Moreover, the materials selection principle<br />

should be the desire to first optimize a particular material property <strong>for</strong> use in a device, and<br />

subsequently search among all possible materials <strong>for</strong> a few specific candidates based on<br />

property-driven selection criteria. Thus, both experimental methods <strong>for</strong> high-throughput<br />

screening <strong>of</strong> materials and theoretical methods that identify electronic and atomic structure based<br />

on targeted material properties are needed. <strong>Solar</strong> concentrators and hot water heaters call <strong>for</strong> new<br />

low-cost polymer-based materials/composites, while new solar thermal storage materials are<br />

required <strong>for</strong> several solar thermal conversion applications.<br />

RESEARCH DIRECTIONS<br />

<strong>Solar</strong> Photon Converters<br />

The traditional approach to development <strong>of</strong> new materials <strong>for</strong> application in photovoltaics has<br />

been to identify materials developed <strong>for</strong> other technological purposes and assess their suitability<br />

to adaptation in photovoltaics. Thus, the materials themselves were developed <strong>for</strong> other<br />

purposes, and their development <strong>of</strong>ten follows the basic sequence in which (1) an interesting<br />

property is discovered; (2) a useful application is invented; (3) “basic research” starts; and<br />

(4) development occurs until the material is <strong>of</strong> adequate quality <strong>for</strong> the identified application.<br />

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