76th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Section of APS
Volume 54, Number 16
Wednesday–Saturday, November 11–14, 2009;
Atlanta, Georgia
Session GB: Energy, Conversion, Storage and Future Trends
8:30 AM–10:30 AM,
Friday, November 13, 2009
Room: Frankfurt
Chair: Ahmet Erbil, Georgia Institute of Technology
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.SES.GB.2
Abstract: GB.00002 : Solar Photovoltaics Technology: The Revolution Begins . . .
9:00 AM–9:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Lawrence Kazmerski
(NREL)
The prospects of current and coming solar-photovoltaic (PV)
technologies are
envisioned, arguing this solar-electricity source is at a tipping
point in the complex
worldwide energy outlook. The emphasis of this presentation is
on R\&D advances
(cell, materials, and module options), with indications of the
limitations and
strengths of crystalline (Si and GaAs) and thin-film (a-Si:H, Si,
Cu(In,Ga)(Se,S)$_{2}$,
CdTe). The contributions and technological pathways for now and
near-term
technologies (silicon, III-Vs, and thin films) and status and
forecasts for next-
generation PV (organics, nanotechnologies, non-conventional
junction approaches)
are evaluated. Recent advances in concentrators with
efficiencies headed toward
50\%, new directions for thin films (20\% and beyond), and
materials/device
technology issues are discussed in terms of technology progress.
Insights into
technical and other investments needed to tip photovoltaics to
its next level of
contribution as a significant clean-energy partner in the world
energy portfolio.
The need for R\&D accelerating the now and imminent
(evolutionary) technologies
balanced with work in mid-term (disruptive) approaches is
highlighted. Moreover,
technology progress and ownership for next generation solar PV
mandates a
balanced investment in research on longer-term (the revolution
needs revolutionary
approaches to sustain itself) technologies (quantum dots,
multi-multijunctions,
intermediate-band concepts, nanotubes, bio-inspired,
thermophotonics, solar
hydrogen. . . ) having high-risk, but extremely high performance
and cost returns
for our next generations of energy consumers. Issues relating to
manufacturing are
explored-especially with the requirements for the next-generation
technologies.
This presentation provides insights into how this technology has
developed-and
where the R\&D investments should be made and we can expect to be
by this mid-21st century.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.SES.GB.2