Organic, Inorganic and Hybrid Solar Cells: Principles and Practice
Ching-Fuh Lin
Provides detailed descriptions of organic, inorganic, and hybrid solar cells and the latest developments in the quest to produce low-cost, long-lasting solar cells
What will it take to transform solar energy from an important alternative source to a truly competitive and, perhaps, dominant one? Lower cost and longer life. Organic, Inorganic, and Hybrid Solar Cells: Principles and Practice provides in-depth information on the three types of existing solar cells, giving readers a good foundation for evaluating the technologies with the most potential for competing with energy from fossil fuels.
Featuring a Foreword written by Nobel Peace Prize co-winner Dr. Woodrow ... Read more
- Focuses on the realization of low-cost and long-life solar cells study and applications
- Reviews the properties of inorganic materials, primarily semiconductors
- Explores the electrical and optical properties of organic materials
- Discusses the interfacing of organic and inorganic materials: compatibility of deposition, the adhesion problem, formation of surface states, and band-level realignment
- Provides a detailed description of organic-inorganic hybrid solar cells, from the basic principles to practical devices
- Introduces a sandwiched structure for hybrid solar cells, which combines a far lower production cost than inorganic solar cells while stabilizing and extending the life of organic material far beyond that of organic solar cells
Organic, Inorganic, and Hybrid Solar Cells: Principles and Practice is a first-rate professional reference for electrical engineers and important supplemental reading for graduate students in related areas of study.
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