APS testing world's most efficient solar cells 
 By Ed Taylor, Tribune 
 Nov 1, 2004 
 http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/index.php?sty=30814

 Arizona Public Service has started testing the world's most efficient
 solar cells at its Solar Technology and Research Center in Tempe.

 The cells, which covert sunlight directly into electricity, have the
 potential to revolutionize the industry by making solar energy more
 cost-competitive with conventional energy sources, said Peter
 Johnston, manager of technology development for APS.

 ãThis has been an evolutionary process, but this technology has the
 potential to bring revolutionary change,ä he said.

 The new photovoltaic technology was developed by the Spectrolab
 division of The Boeing Co., and similar systems have been used to
 power spacecraft, including the Mars Rovers. The APS test is the
 first time it has been demonstrated as part of a utility's electricity
 grid.

 ãIt's small, a one kilowatt system, but it's the world's first,ä Johnston
 said.

 The new device uses concentrating triple junction solar cells, which
 are composed of three layers of semiconducting material, each of
 which extracts energy from a different part of the solar light
 spectrum. The efficiency is further enhanced by a system of mirrors
 that concentrates the sunlight by 500 times onto each cell. That is
 about twice the concentration of existing photovoltaic systems,
 Johnston said. As a result, the new system is expected to be about
 50 percent more efficient at converting sunlight into electricity than
 other technology APS has tested to date, he said.

 The silicon cells APS has been testing at the STAR center have
 about a 20 percent efficiency rating, meaning that about 20 percent
 of the sun's energy is converted to electricity. The new cells, which
 are made of layers of gallium indium phosphide, indium gallium
 arsenide and germanium, have a conversion efficiency of about 32
 percent, Johnston said.

 Eventually Boeing hopes to increase that efficiency to 50 percent,
 he said. Increasing the efficiency of solar cells is important to
 bringing down the cost of solar energy. To date the cost per
 kilowatt of electricity produced from sunlight has been about four
 times greater than electricity produced from conventional sources
 such as coal. The new system may cut that cost in half, making solar
 still twice as expensive but closer to being competitive, especially if
 conventional sources of fuel continue to increase in price, Johnston
 said. The system is less costly because fewer cells are needed,
 which reduces the amount of expensive semiconducting material that
 is used, said Dr. Raed Sherif, manager of terrestrial photovoltaic
 activity at Boeing Spectrolab. 

 APS plans to continue testing the system for about a year and will
 install improved cells as they are developed. The purpose is to test
 the reliability of the technology, which could encourage more utilities
 to give it a try, Sherif said. 

 Because triple junction solar cells have functioned successfully in the
 extreme temperatures of space, Sherif believes they will prove
 reliable on Earth, even in the intense heat of sunlight concentrated
 500 times. ãWe don't think the performance will degrade, but that is
 one of the things we need to demonstrate,ä he said.
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