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Get Free AccessIn recent photovoltaic research, nanomaterials have offered two new approaches for trapping light within solar cells to increase their absorption: nanostructuring the absorbing semiconductor and using metallic nanostructures to couple light into the absorbing layer. This work combines these two approaches by decorating a single-nanowire silicon solar cell with an octahedral silver nanocrystal. Wavelength-dependent photocurrent measurements and finite-difference time domain simulations show that increases in photocurrent arise at wavelengths corresponding to the nanocrystal's surface plasmon resonances, while decreases occur at wavelengths corresponding to optical resonances of the nanowire. Scanning photocurrent mapping with submicrometer spatial resolution experimentally confirms that changes in the device's photocurrent come from the silver nanocrystal. These results demonstrate that understanding the interactions between nanoscale absorbers and plasmonic nanostructures is essential to optimizing the efficiency of nanostructured solar cells.
Sarah Brittman, Hanwei Gao, Erik C. Garnett, Peidong Yang (2011). Absorption of Light in a Single-Nanowire Silicon Solar Cell Decorated with an Octahedral Silver Nanocrystal. , 11(12), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/nl2023806.
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Type
Article
Year
2011
Authors
4
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
en
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1021/nl2023806
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