Traditionally, land can be used for either crop growth or energy production. This technology optimizes the efficiency of land use by combining both. Researchers at the University of California, Davis have developed solar cell designs that absorb only specific solar photons (> 2.2 eV) to create electricity, while letting through beneficial light (< 2.2 eV) for efficient crop growth.
The technology is an agrivoltaic solution involving solar cells that generate electricity by absorbing photons with energy greater than 2.2 eV and are transparent to photons with energy less than 2.2 eV. As such, these cells enable both energy production and crop growth on the same land by effectively separating the spectral light required for each. Two candidate materials, gallium phosphide (GaP) and a specially thinned silicon (Si) solar cell, are utilized to this end.
Patent Pending
agrivoltaics, food production, energy production, gallium phosphide (GaP), light separation, silicon (Si) solar cells, solar energy