PV: A meeting to discuss how optical nanostructures can make better solar cells.
Photovoltaic solar electricity is one of the key technologies for reducing the world's reliance on fossil fuels for energy generation. Reduced costs and higher conversion efficiencies are essential for making photovoltaics economically competitive. Optical nanostructures have a major role to play in improving the efficiency of solar cells by increasing the absorption of incident light, especially for thin-film applications. Solar concentrator systems, organic solar cells and dye-sensitized cells also stand to benefit from nanophotonic engineering schemes. This meeting aims to bring together experts from the fields of nanophotonics and photovoltaics to address the issues and opportunities for merging these two technologies. The scope of the meeting covers all aspects of optical nanostructures for photovoltaic applications, from textured surfaces and diffraction gratings through to emerging areas such as plasmonic enhancement, spectrally split multiple cells and spectral flux management in multijunction solar cells.
Papers were considered in the following topic categories:
- Antireflection coatings
- Gratings and diffractive optics for light trapping
- Plasmonic enhancement
- Slow light and resonance enhancement of optical absorption
- Spectral splitting
- Spectral flux management
- Nanostructures for solar concentrators
- Nanostructures for dye-sensitized solar cells
- Nanostructures for thin-film organic solar cells
- Novel solar cell geometries
The Call for Papers will be available March 30, 2012.
View the 2011 Meeting Archive containing the final program (PDF)
Go to Optics InfoBase for a listing of all meeting paper archives.
This event is part of the Renewable Energy and the Environment Congress, allowing attendees to access to all meetings within the Congress for the price of one and to collaborate on topics of mutual interest.
Renewable Energy and the Environment: OSA Optics & Photonics Congress
- Optics for Solar Energy (SOLAR)
- Solid State and Organic Lighting (SOLED)
- Optical Nanostructures and Advanced Materials for Photovoltaics (PV)
- Optical Instrumentation for Energy & Environmental Applications (E2)
Sponsor: