Thermophotovoltaic power conversion utilizes thermal radiation from a local heat source to generate electricity in a photovoltaic cell. It was shown in recent years that the addition of a highly reflective rear mirror to a solar cell maximizes the extraction of luminescence. This, in turn, boosts the voltage, enabling the creation of record-breaking devices. Now we report that the rear mirror can be used to create thermophotovoltaic systems with unprecedented high efficiency. This mirror reflects low-energy infrared photons back into the heat source, recovering their energy. This radically improves thermophotovoltaic efficiency. Therefore, the rear mirror serves a dual function; boosting the voltage and re-using infrared thermal photons. This allows the possibility of a practical >50% efficient thermophotovoltaic system. Based on this reflective rear mirror concept, we recently experimentally demonstrated a thermophotovoltaic efficiency of 29.1%, a new efficiency record. In this work,
Zunaid Omair, Gregg Scranton, Luis Pazos, T. Patrick Xiao, Myles A. Steiner, Vidya Ganapati, Per F. Peterson, J. F. Holzrichter, Harry A. Atwater, Eli Yablonovitch
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