
Lehigh University researchers have created a revolutionary solar cell material with up to 190% external quantum efficiency, pushing beyond conventional efficiency limits and showing great promise for enhancing future solar energy systems. Further development is required for practical application, supported by a U.S. Department of Energy grant.
It shows great potential for advancing the development of highly efficient next-generation solar cells, which are vital for meeting global energy demands.
A team from Lehigh University has created a material that could significantly enhance the efficiency of solar panels.
A prototype using the material as the active layer in a solar cell exhibits an average photovoltaic absorption of 80%, a high generation rate of photoexcited carriers, and an external quantum efficiency (EQE) up to an unprecedented 190%—a measure that far exceeds the theoretical Shockley-Queisser efficiency limit for silicon-based materials and pushes the field of quantum materials for photovoltaics to new heights.

Chindeu Ekuma. Credit: Lehigh University
“This work represents a significant leap forward in our understanding and development of sustainable energy solutions, highlighting innovative approaches that could redefine solar energy efficiency and accessibility in the near future,” said Chinedu Ekuma, professor of physics, who published a paper on the development of the material with Lehigh doctoral student Srihari Kastuar in the journal
Advanced Material Properties
The material’s efficiency leap is attributable largely to its distinctive “intermediate band states,” specific energy levels that are positioned within the material’s electronic structure in a way that makes them ideal for solar energy conversion.
These states have energy levels within the optimal subband gaps—energy ranges where the material can efficiently absorb sunlight and produce charge carriers—of around 0.78 and 1.26 electron volts.
In addition, the material performs especially well with high levels of absorption in the infrared and visible regions of the electromagnetic spectrum.

Schematic of the thin-film solar cell with CuxGeSe/SnS as the active layer. Credit: Ekuma Lab / Lehigh University
In traditional solar cells, the maximum EQE is 100%, representing the generation and collection of one electron for each
Srihari Kastuar, Lehigh University. Credit: Lehigh University