Traditional silicon solar cells can only absorb the solar spectrum at wavelengths below 1.1 μm. Here we proposed a breakthrough in harvesting solar energy below Si bandgap through conversion of hot carriers generated in the metal into a current using an energy barrier at the metal-semiconductor junction. Under appropriate conditions, the photo-excited hot carriers can quickly pass through the energy barrier and lead to photocurrent, maximizing the use of excitation energy and reducing waste heat consumption. Compared with conventional silicon solar cells, hot-carrier photovoltaic conversion Schottky device has better absorption and conversion efficiency for an infrared regime above 1.1 μm, expands the absorption wavelength range of silicon-based solar cells, makes more effective use of the entire solar spectrum, and further improves the photovoltaic performance of metal-silicon interface components by controlling the evaporation rate, deposition thickness, and annealing temperature of the metal layer. Finally, the conversion efficiency 3.316% is achieved under the infrared regime with a wavelength of more than 1100 nm and an irradiance of 13.85 mW/cm.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10070618PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-31982-1DOI Listing

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