Bifacial thermophotovoltaic energy conversion
A. Datas

TL;DR
This paper introduces a bifacial thermophotovoltaic (TPV) cell design that enhances efficiency and power density by enabling photon recycling without mirrors, reducing optical losses, and improving practicality for low-cost power generation.
Contribution
The paper proposes a novel bifacial TPV cell design that eliminates the need for high-reflectance mirrors, allowing for higher efficiency and power density in TPV systems.
Findings
Bifacial TPV cells achieve higher conversion efficiencies.
Bifacial design doubles the power density compared to monofacial cells.
The approach reduces sensitivity to outband optical losses.
Abstract
Thermophotovoltaic (TPV) energy conversion efficiency has recently surpassed 30%. The key behind such high efficiency is the inclusion of a highly efficient mirror in the rear of the TPV cell that turns back to the thermal emitter the outband energy photons. Efficiencies over 50% could be theoretically attainable by approaching a mirror reflectance of 100%. However, the very few percent of outband absorption significantly deteriorate the conversion efficiency. Thus, current research focuses on developing advance mirror designs able to reach an extreme high outband reflectance over 95%. In this article I propose a bifacial TPV cell that enables very efficient photon recycling without using mirrors and that is less sensitive to outband optical losses. The key to this design is that the cell is introduced in a thermal emitter enclosure where it is irradiated from both sides. Then, outband…
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Taxonomy
TopicsThermal Radiation and Cooling Technologies · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
