You are on page 1of 2

Photonic Crystal Uses Coldness of the Universe to Chill Solar

Panels on Earth
Last December, researchers at Stanford University developed a passive radiator that uses outer
space as a universe-size heat sink. It absorbs ambient heat and then emits it at a very specific
infrared band(between 8 and 13 micrometers), for whichthe Earths atmosphere is completely
transparent.So the radiator can transfer the heat entirely off-world.
Stanford's radiator is cheap to produce (or so they say), but it would be fighting for rooftop space
with all the solar panels that we (should) have up there. In workpublished today in PNAS, the
Stanford researchers describe the performance of a prototype photonic crystal cooling system that
can sit on top of a solar cell and cool it by up to 13 degrees Celsiusboosting the amount of electricity
that it generates.

The PNAS paper opens by pointing out that "the universe, at a temperature of 3 K, represents a
significant renewable thermodynamic resource." No kidding: we just need a way to leverage it. The
passive radiator we talked about last year does that very well, and is able to lower the temperature
of anything that it's attached to by 5 degrees Celsius using the universe as a heat sink. This works
even during the daytime in full sun, and can achieve cooling below ambient air temperature.
However, part of what makes it so effective is the fact that it's also reflecting 97 percentof incoming
sunlight, which isn't going to fly if you're trying to stick it on top of a solar panel, which depends on
absorbing sunlight to function.
What's new here is the development of a silica photonic crystal that's visibly transparent: it still acts
as a blackbody radiator, but you can put it on top of a conventional solar cell. When you do, it
transfers heat out of that cell, lowering its temperature by up to 13 degrees Celsius, emitting that
heat out into space. At the same time, the antireflection and light trapping effects of the crystal
slightly boosts the performance of the cell underneath. And there's one more bonus: the relative
efficiency of a crystalline silicon solar cell declines by 0.45% for every 1 C increase in operating
temperature. In terms of absolute efficiency, then, the 13 C temperature reduction that the Stanford
prototype demonstrated would result in an efficiency improvement of over 1 percent, which is
substantial.
The photonic crystal itself is a 500-m thick double-sidepolished fused silica wafer, with a pattern of

6-m wide, 10-m deep holes etched into it. The crystal was fabricated using photolithography and
etching, but it should be possible to use other techniques at larger scales to reduce costs. If we start
thinking about all of the potential applicationsassuming a cost-effective manufacturing process,
which seems realisticwhat we end up with in general is solar power being in the unique position of
being able to generate electricity while simultaneously cooling things. This is immediately valuable
for relatively small scale applications like automotive air conditioning(especially given its effect on
fuel economy)but also at larger scales, anything where energy is just as important as coolness could
benefit from solar cells that are extra chill.
http://spectrum.ieee.org/energywise/energy/renewables/photonic-crystals-use-coldness-of-the-univer
se-to-chill-solar-panels-on-earth

You might also like