Solar Cell Efficiency

EM Spectrum
Testing silicon solar cells.

The efficiency is the most commonly used parameter to compare the performance of one solar cell to another. Efficiency is defined as the ratio of energy output from the solar cell to input energy from the sun. In addition to reflecting the performance of the solar cell itself, the efficiency depends on the spectrum and intensity of the incident sunlight and the temperature of the solar cell. Therefore, conditions under which efficiency is measured must be carefully controlled in order to compare the performance of one device to another. Terrestrial solar cells are measured under AM1.5 conditions and at a temperature of 25°C. Solar cells intended for space use are measured under AM0 conditions. Recent top efficiency solar cell results are given in the page Solar Cell Efficiency Results.

The efficiency of a solar cell is determined as the fraction of incident power which is converted to electricity and is defined as:

\(P_{\max }=V_{OC} I_{SC} F F\)

\(\eta=\frac{V_{O C} I_{S C} F F}{P_{i n}}\)

Where:
Voc is the open-circuit voltage;
Isc is the short-circuit current;
FF is the fill factor and
η is the efficiency.

The input power for efficiency calculations is 1 kW/m2 or 100 mW/cm2. Thus the input power for a 100 × 100 mm2 cell is 10 W and for a 156 × 156 mm2 cell is 24.3 W

 

Efficiency Calculator

Input Parameters

Results