Luminescent
solar concentrators (LSCs) use down-converting luminophores
embedded in a waveguide to absorb sunlight and deliver high irradiance,
narrowband output light for driving photovoltaic and other solar energy
conversion devices. Achieving a technologically useful level of optical
gain requires bright, broadly absorbing, large-Stokes-shift luminophores
incorporated into low-loss waveguides, a combination that has long
posed a challenge to the development of practical LSCs. The recent
introduction of giant effective Stokes shift semiconductor nanocrystal
(NC) phosphors for LSC applications has led to significant performance
improvements by increasing solar absorption while reducing escape
cone and nonradiative losses compounded by reabsorption, placing increased
emphasis on the importance of minimizing parasitic waveguide losses
caused by scattering from NC aggregates and optical imperfections.
Here, we report a detailed analysis of optical losses in polymer–NC
composite waveguide LSCs based on CuInS2/CdS NC phosphors,
which have been shown to provide best-in-class performance in large-area,
semitransparent concentrators. A comprehensive analytical optical
model is introduced enabling quantification of parasitic waveguide,
scattering, escape cone, and nonradiative relaxation losses on the
basis of distance-dependent edge-emission measurements. By examining
the effect of NC loading, we show that NC clustering in polymer composite
waveguides leads to light scattering losses that ultimately limit
efficiency at large geometric gain. By optimizing NC concentration,
optical power efficiencies up to 5.7% under AM1.5 illumination are
demonstrated for devices having a geometric gain G = 6.7×, with limiting achievable efficiencies predicted to
exceed 10%.
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