Photonic Design: From Fundamental Solar Cell Physics to Computational Inverse Design
Owen D. Miller

TL;DR
This paper combines fundamental solar cell physics with a novel computational inverse design approach to advance photonic devices, emphasizing photon management for higher efficiency and innovative design solutions.
Contribution
It introduces an inverse design framework for photonics, applying it to solar cells and optical devices, bridging physics and computational methods for innovation.
Findings
Photonic considerations are crucial for reaching solar cell efficiency limits.
Inverse design enables creation of non-intuitive, high-performance photonic structures.
Designs for optical cloaking and sub-wavelength solar cells are demonstrated.
Abstract
Photonic innovation is becoming ever more important in the modern world. Optical systems are dominating shorter and shorter communications distances, LED's are rapidly emerging for a variety of applications, and solar cells show potential to be a mainstream technology in the energy space. The need for novel, energy-efficient photonic and optoelectronic devices will only increase. This work unites fundamental physics and a novel computational inverse design approach towards such innovation. The first half of the dissertation is devoted to the physics of high-efficiency solar cells. As solar cells approach fundamental efficiency limits, their internal physics transforms. Photonic considerations, instead of electronic ones, are the key to reaching the highest voltages and efficiencies. Proper photon management led to Alta Device's recent dramatic increase of the solar cell efficiency…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOptical Wireless Communication Technologies
