Scientific Reports (Apr 2017)
Simple Rectangular Gratings as a Near-Field “Anti-Reflection” Pattern for GaSb TPV Cells
Abstract
Abstract We show theoretically that 2D rectangular gratings on the surface of GaSb can serve as an “anti-reflection” pattern for nano-gap thermophotovoltaic (TPV) devices, which significantly enhances near-field radiative flux from the emitter to a GaSb cell, thus improving output power and conversion efficiency. The system in this study is a 200-nm gap TPV power generation system with a planar infrared plasmonic emitter and GaSb cell. Rigorous coupled-wave analysis is used to calculate the spectral near-field radiative flux involving periodic structures. The simulation shows that when coupled with a near-infrared plasmonic bulk emitter, adding gratings on the GaSb cell surface results in strong spectral enhancement above the cell’s bandgap and suppression for low-energy photon transmission, an effect that cannot be fully predicted by the effective medium theory. The resultant peak spectral heat flux is 2.8 times as high as the case without surface structures and the radiative transfer efficiency increased to 24.8% from the original 14.5% with the emitter temperature at 1800 K. The influence of the grating’s geometry parameters on the enhancement and peak frequency is further discussed with rigorous calculation of the spatial distribution of thermal radiative transfer that provided insight into the physical mechanism.