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Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time
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Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time.

Dec 16, 2015

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Jaylynn Harper
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Page 1: Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time.

Solar Electricity

Light energy, one photon at a time

Page 2: Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time.

Outline

Photoelectric Effect– The existence of photons– Light energy in bundles– Light energy creating an electric potential

Photovoltaic cells– Semiconductors– Energy band gaps– Silicon, Gallium Arsenide, Thin Films

Page 3: Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time.

Light is a wave, or is it?

Waves carry energy in proportion to their amplitude

Light wave amplitude is Intensity.So light energy should depend on intensityThe brighter the light, the more energy it

carries.

Page 4: Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time.

The Photoelectric Effect.

The Experiment.

Light source

Metal Plate

electrons

ElectricCurrent

Page 5: Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time.

Light making a current

Light shining on a metal can create a current: The Photoelectric effect.

Experiment:– VARY the light frequency (or wavelength) but

keep the intensity the same.– OBSERVE the Voltage required to stop a

current from flowing (the “stopping voltage”)– This should be a measure of the energy the

electrons have as they leave the metal plate.

Page 6: Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time.

Photoelectric effect and light frequency

Frequency vs. Stopping Voltage

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

0.00E+00 2.00E+14 4.00E+14 6.00E+14 8.00E+14 1.00E+15

Frequency (Hz)

Vol

ts

Page 7: Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time.

Analysis

Observations:– For each metal, there was a certain frequency below

which no amount of light could cause a current.

– Above that frequency, there was some current no matter how weak the light source.

– The energy the electrons in the current had directly depended on the frequency of the light

– Although MORE CURRENT could be produced with higher intensity light, the STOPPING VOLTAGE depended only on the frequency.

Page 8: Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time.

Einstein’s explanation

Published in 1905; Nobel Prize in 1921.Light energy comes in packets, called “photons”Each photon carries an energy equal to:

– Eph = h f, where f is the frequency, and h = 6.63 x 10 -34 J*s is called Planck’s constant.

The electrons absorb one photon at a timeThe electrons need a minimum of energy to escape

the metal surface, hence the minimum f.The photon energy above the minimum goes into

the energy of the current, hence the increasing V.

Page 9: Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time.

Photon Energy

Eph = h f– Red light has f = 4.5 x 1014 Hz– Ered = (6.63 x 10-34 J*s ) (4.5 x 1014 Hz)

• = 2.98 x 10-19 Joules!

We can’t feel that, but what about an electron?A new unit of energy:

– 1 eV, the amount of energy required to move a single electron across a 1 Volt electric potential.

– 1 eV = 1.6 x 10-19 Joules

Ered = 1.86 eV– Red photons have enough energy to charge up a 1.8 V battery!

Page 10: Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time.

The light energy spectrum

Light frequency corresponds to photon energy.

The most convenient unit is eV. h = 6.63 x 10-34J*s = 4.15 x 10-15eV*sVisible light from 1.8 (red) to 3 eV (violet)

Page 11: Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time.
Page 12: Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time.

Photovoltaic Cells

n-type Silicon

p-type Silicon

+ + + + +

- - - - - 1.5-2 V

electron

Page 13: Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time.

The p-n junction

Page 14: Solar Electricity Light energy, one photon at a time.

PV-types and applications

Each cell produces .5 to 1.5 V, 8-24 cells in series produce 12 V. Highest efficiency – 23%

Types:– Crystalline Silicon: More efficient/expensive– Amorphous Silicon: Less efficient/expensive– Thin Film: Silicon or other semiconductors

Applications:– Remote locations– Homes more than ¼ of mile from electric grid.– Watches, calculators