Counterbalancing light absorption and ionic transport losses in the electrolyte for integrated solar water splitting with III-V/Si dual-junctions
Moritz K\"olbach (1), Ciler \"Ozen (2), Oliver H\"ohn (3), David, Lackner (3), Markus Feifel (3), Fatwa F. Abdi (2), Matthias M. May (1) ((1), Universit\"at Ulm, (2) Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin f\"ur Materialien und Energie, GmbH

TL;DR
This paper models the effects of electrolyte layer thickness and bandgap tuning on the efficiency of integrated III-V/Si dual-junction solar water splitting devices, proposing design rules for optimizing solar-to-hydrogen efficiency.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model analyzing electrolyte and bandgap effects, providing guidelines for designing high-efficiency photoelectrochemical water splitting devices.
Findings
Optimal electrolyte thickness balances absorption and transport losses.
Bandgap tuning of the top absorber enhances efficiency.
Up to 1% absolute increase in solar-to-hydrogen efficiency.
Abstract
Recently, significant progress in the development of III-V/Si dual-junction solar cells has been achieved. This not only boosts the efficiency of Si-based photovoltaic solar cells, but also offers the possibility of highly efficient green hydrogen production via solar water splitting. Using such dual-junction cells in a highly integrated photoelectrochemical approach and aiming for upscaled devices with solar-to-hydrogen efficiencies beyond 20\%, however, the following frequently neglected contrary effects become relevant: (i) light absorption in the electrolyte layer in front of the top absorber and (ii) the impact of this layer on the ohmic and transport losses. Here, we initially model the influence of the electrolyte layer thickness on the maximum achievable solar-to-hydrogen efficiency of a device with an Si bottom cell and show how the top absorber bandgap has to be adapted to…
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