Passive radiative cooling improves high-end solar cells

Pusan National University in Korea is increasing the efficiency of solar cells by bouncing heat back into the sky.

Pusan solar radiative cooling Gil Ju Lee

“Standing in the sun all day, solar cells often become very heated,” according to the university. “Over time, this degrades them and lowers their power-conversion efficiency. Integrating radiative coolers can solve this problem without energy consumption.”

The Prusan cells are being cooled radiatively by a microscopic optical grating on the surface of the cell, with the materials and placement of the grating enhancing light absorption and emitting heat, as infra-red radiation, away from the cell.


This is not a new idea, but this “research is the first theoretical and experimental demonstration of the effectiveness of radiative-cooler-integrated solar cells,” said lead engineer Gil Ju Lee (pictured).


Pusan solar radiative cooling detail

Theoretical work indicated that multi-junction solar cells (MJSCs, diagram left) were the best technology on which to try radiative cooling, and the team went on to take InGaP-GaAs-Ge cells through outdoor trials.

Under ~900W/m2 direct sunlight, radiative gratings caused a 6°C temperature drop, 2% increase in open-circuit voltage, and 0.5 mA increase in short circuit current compared with plain glass, said the university.

“Before our study, research has largely focused on single-junction solar cells and computational evaluations,” said Lee. “Our study is the first to experimentally show that multi-junction solar calls benefit the most from radiative cooling.”

This research has been published in Advanced Engineering materials as ‘Determining the effectiveness of radiative cooler-integrated solar cells‘ – payment required for full access.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*