Reversible electron-hole separation in a hot carrier solar cell
Steven Limpert, Stephen Bremner, and Heiner Linke

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the conditions for reversible electron-hole separation in hot-carrier solar cells, revealing potential efficiency surpassing Carnot limits and new operational modes, thus advancing understanding of their fundamental limits.
Contribution
It establishes the conditions for reversible operation in hot-carrier solar cells and derives a voltage expression accounting for thermoelectric and photovoltaic effects, guiding future device optimization.
Findings
Efficiency can exceed Carnot limit due to quasi-Fermi level splitting.
Open-circuit voltage is not limited by the band gap.
Hot-carrier solar cells can operate as thermally driven light emitters.
Abstract
Hot-carrier solar cells are envisioned to utilize energy filtering to extract power from photogenerated electron-hole pairs before they thermalize with the lattice, and thus potentially offer higher power conversion efficiency compared to conventional, single absorber solar cells. The efficiency of hot-carrier solar cells can be expected to strongly depend on the details of the energy filtering process, a relationship which to date has not been satisfactorily explored. Here, we establish the conditions under which electron-hole separation in hot-carrier solar cells can occur reversibly, that is, at maximum energy conversion efficiency. We thus focus our analysis on the internal operation of the hot-carrier solar cell itself, and in this work do not consider the photon-mediated coupling to the sun. After deriving an expression for the voltage of a hot-carrier solar cell valid under…
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