Light Emitting Diodes in the Experimental Practice for the Characterization of Novel Photovoltaics

Pravettoni, Mauro and Manni, Loris and Dittmann, Sebastian (2015) Light Emitting Diodes in the Experimental Practice for the Characterization of Novel Photovoltaics. In: Gloeckler, M. and Tiwari, A. N. and Yamada, A. and Yan, Y. and Kim, J. Y. and Miyasaka, T. and Mora-Seró, I. and Zhu, K. and Andersson, M. and Manca, J. V. and Palomares, E. and Vandewal, K. and Li, T. and Mastro, M. and Tao, M. and Wang, Q., (eds.) Symposium B/C/D/E – Recent Advances in Photovoltaics. MRS Proceedings (1771). Materials Research Society 2015, pp. 45-50.

Full text not available from this repository.

Abstract

Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs) have recently gained importance in the experimental practice of photovoltaic (PV) devices. LEDs have already been proposed as the alternative to conventional xenon or halogen based solar simulators. Multi-junction PV devices use coloured LEDs in experimental tools as well: LEDs can transform a conventional solar simulator in a spectrally adjustable simulator for spectral characterization of multi-junction modules. Other useful applications include evaluating the dependence of the electrical parameters on the average photon energy and spectral responsivity measurements of multi-junction PV devices.

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item