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Next-gen solar cells trap sunlight with microbeads

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Silicon solar cells 20 times thinner than commercial ones have been produced using 95 percent less silicon, reducing production costs considerably. The trick? Using a back sheet peppered with microbeads that fool light into staying longer within the solar cell. Standard commercial photovoltaics are made of 200-µm-thick plates sliced from a large block of silicon. To make several billion solar panels per year, large amounts of silicon are consumed – around 5 grams of silicon per watt of electricity produced – and much of the silicon is wasted: Roughly half of the block...Read full article

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    Published: April 2013
    Aasmund Sudbøasymmetrical microindentationsback sheetenergyErik MarsteinEuropeGreenLightindustrialmicrobeadsNorwayperiodic patternphotovoltaicssolar cell efficiencysolar cell manufacturingthin solar cellsUglestad microbeadsUniversity of Oslo

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