
• "". SunPower Corporation, 2004.• "". About, Inc., 2005.• Lenardic, Denis, "". PVResources.com, 2015.• Perlin, John, " ". Rahus Institute, 2002.. The was experimentally demonstrated first by French physicist . In 1839, at age 19, he built the world's first photovoltaic cell in his father's laboratory. first described the "Effect of Light on Selenium during the passage of an Electric Current" in a 20 February 1873 issue of . In 1883 built the first photovoltaic cell b. [pdf]
The history of solar cells involves scientific discovery, invention, and rivalry. We often consider solar power to be a new technology, but it dates back to ancient times. Humans have been using solar energy for light and heat for hundreds of years.
use of a grid contact, reducing the cell's resistance. • 1960 - Hoffman Electronics creates a 14% efficient solar cell. • 1961 - "Solar Energy in the Developing World" conference is held by the United Nations. • 1962 - The Telstar communications satellite is powered by solar cells .
Many argue that this event marks the true invention of PV technology because it was the first instance of solar technology that could actually power an electric device for several hours of a day. The first ever silicon solar cell could convert sunlight at four percent efficiency, less than a quarter of what modern cells are capable of.
In 1994, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory developed a new solar cell from gallium indium phosphide and gallium arsenide that exceeded 30% conversion efficiency. By the end of the century, the laboratory created thin-film solar cells that converted 32% of the sunlight it collected into usable energy.
However, solar cells as we know them today are made with silicon, not selenium. Therefore, some consider the true invention of solar panels to be tied to Daryl Chapin, Calvin Fuller, and Gerald Pearson's creation of the silicon photovoltaic (PV) cell at Bell Labs in 1954.
That same year, a Russian scientist by the name of Aleksandr Stoletov created the first solar cell based on the photoelectric effect, which is when light falls on a material and electrons are released. This effect was first observed by a German physicist, Heinrich Hertz.
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