Solar
Cells
Solar cells
are most often made from silicon. This is due in part to silicon having
been an abundant resource. But it is also because silicon is atomically
apt for the life of a solar cell.
A silicon atom has four
electrons in its outer shell, but it "wants" to have eight. Therefore, one
silicon atom will bond with four other silicon atoms. This fills up its
outer shell and creates a very strong crystalline solid.
Of course, to be a good
conductor of solar energy, solar cells must have electrons that are free
to move about. For this reason, both phosphorous and boron are added.
Phosphorous has five electrons on its outer shell. This means that when it
bonds with silicon, there is one extra electron. Boron, on the other hand,
only has only three outer shell electrons. When it bonds with silicon,
there is an electron "hole."
So solar cells are made
not just of silicon, but a silicon/phosphorous layer and a silicon/boron
layer. When these two layers are sandwiched together, the free electrons
of one layer all rush to fill the empty electron spaces of the other. The
creates an electric field. When the photons from sunlight hit the solar
cell, extra electrons are knocked off their orbits and holes are filled.
This is how solar electricity is created.