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  2. Solar cell research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_cell_research

    Flexible solar cell research is a research-level technology, an example of which was created at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in which solar cells are manufactured by depositing photovoltaic material on flexible substrates, such as ordinary paper, using chemical vapor deposition technology. [22]

  3. Flexible solar cell research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flexible_solar_cell_research

    Flexible solar cell research is a research-level technology, an example of which was created at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in which solar cells are manufactured by depositing photovoltaic material on flexible substrates, such as ordinary paper, using chemical vapor deposition technology.

  4. Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_Energy_Materials_and...

    A paper titled "Ageing effects of perovskite solar cells under different environmental factors and electrical load conditions" published in 2018 in the journal [2] corresponded to a paper previously published in the journal Nature Energy as "Systematic investigation of the impact of operation conditions on the degradation behaviour of perovskite solar cells". [3]

  5. Plasmonic solar cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasmonic_solar_cell

    A direct plasmonic solar cell is a solar cell that converts light into electricity using plasmons as the active, photovoltaic material. The active material thickness varies from that of traditional silicon PV (~100-200 μm wafers) , [ 4 ] to less than 2 μm thick, and theoretically could be as thin as 100 nm. [ 5 ]

  6. Organic solar cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organic_solar_cell

    Recent research and study has been done in utilizing an organic solar cell as the top cell in a hybrid tandem solar cell stack. Because organic solar cells have a higher band gap than traditional inorganic photovoltaics like silicon or CIGS , they can absorb higher energy photons without losing much of the energy due to thermalization, and thus ...

  7. Carbon nanotubes in photovoltaics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotubes_in...

    Cells fabricated with this architecture have achieved record power conversion efficiencies of 3.1%, higher than any other solar cell materials that utilize CNTs in the active layer. This design also has exceptional stability, with the PCE remaining at around 90% over a period of 30 days. [24]

  8. Thin-film solar cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thin-film_solar_cell

    In a typical solar cell, the photovoltaic effect is used to generate electricity from sunlight. The light-absorbing or "active layer" of the solar cell is typically a semiconducting material, meaning that there is a gap in its energy spectrum between the valence band of localized electrons around host ions and the conduction band of higher-energy electrons which are free to move throughout the ...

  9. Solar cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_cell

    A solar cell or photovoltaic cell (PV cell) is an electronic device that converts the energy of light directly into electricity by means of the photovoltaic effect. [1] It is a form of photoelectric cell, a device whose electrical characteristics (such as current, voltage, or resistance) vary when it is exposed to light.