Sunday, May 26, 2013: Solar power and its milestones! Soitec (Euronext) announced industry’s first four-junction solar cell device, which works under concentrated sunlight, putting the company on the solar-energy industry’s technology roadmap at a world-class level of an outstanding 43.6 percent efficiency.
This innovative technology was made possible through strong collaboration between solar cell device and epitaxial growth centers of expertise combined with Soitec’s decades-long leadership in substrate-bonding and layer-transfer technologies – validates the unique roadmap enabling, thanks to the four junctions structure to target the 50 per cent efficiency level. This roadmap marks a major competitiveness breakthrough in the photovoltaic industry.
Soitec’s four-junction solar cell has achieved today a peak efficiency of 43.6 percent, as confirmed by the Fraunhofer ISE Calibration Laboratory. This measurement was achieved at a concentration level of 319 (319 suns). The new cell has demonstrated more than 43 per cent energy-generating efficiency over a concentration range between 250 and 500.
Today’s triple-junction solar cells used in commercial concentrator photovoltaic (CPV) modules in real-world applications are approaching their physical limits in converting sunlight into renewable energy. Soitec’s four- junction cell is designed to increase the conversion efficiency of commercial CPV systems to the highest level ever achieved by any photovoltaic technology. Based on the initial results obtained using very few integration runs, Soitec is well positioned at the front of the efficiency race.
The innovative four-junction cell uses two new, highly sophisticated dual-junction sub cells grown on different III-V compound materials, which allows optimal band-gap combinations tailored to capture a broader range of the solar spectrum. This maximizes energy-generating efficiency. Soitec leverages its proprietary semiconductor-bonding (Smart Stacking) and layer-transfer (Smart Cut) technologies, which have been used in volume production by the global semiconductor industry for decades.
The new cell was developed in collaboration with the Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems (ISE) in Freiburg, Germany, and the Helmholtz-Zentrum für Materialien und Energie in Berlin.
Commenting on the announcement, Jacques Auberton-Hervé, CEO of the company said, “Boosting efficiency levels is a key step in outperforming the economics of conventional PV. This great achievement brings strong value to our solar division and validates our strategy and business model in the solar market. Through our collaboration with the Fraunhofer and the Leti, two world-class R&D partners, our own leadership experience in materials and bonding technologies as well as our CPV commercial experience, we have been able to achieve this major advancement in a very short time. This represents a major proof-of-concept, on track to demonstrate a concentrated solar cell with 50 per cent efficiency as soon as 2015.”