Light trapping in solar cells allows for increased current and voltage, as\nwell as reduced materials cost. It is known that in geometrical optics, a\nmaximum 4n^2 absorption enhancement factor can be achieved by randomly\ntexturing the surface of the solar cell, where n is the material refractive\nindex. This ray-optics absorption enhancement limit only holds when the\nthickness of the solar cell is much greater than the optical wavelength. In\nsub-wavelength thin films, the fundamental questions remain unanswered: (1)\nwhat is the sub-wavelength absorption enhancement limit and (2) what surface\ntexture realizes this optimal absorption enhancement? We turn to computational\nelectromagnetic optimization in order to design nanoscale textures for light\ntrapping in sub-wavelength thin films. For high-index thin films, in the weakly\nabsorbing limit, our optimized surface textures yield an angle- and\nfrequency-averaged enhancement factor ~39. They perform roughly 30% better than\nrandomly textured structures, but they fall short of the ray optics enhancement\nlimit of 4n^2 ~ 50.\n
T. Patrick Xiao, Osman S. Cifci, Samarth Bhargava, Hao Chen, Timo Gissibl, Weijun Zhou, Harald Gießen, Kimani C. Toussaint, Eli Yablonovitch, Paul V. Braun
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