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The 130% solar cell: how a 'spin-flip' quantum trick produced more energy carriers than photons absorbed
A single photon goes in. Roughly 1.3 usable energy carriers come out. That is the result reported in May 2026 by a team at Kyushu University and Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, who used a quantum ...
Researchers in Japan have developed a new material that allows solar cells to generate an amount of energy from sunlight that was previously thought impossible. The discovery, made by a team at Kyushu ...
New “spin-flip” emitter harvests energy previously lost as wasteful heat, yields 130% By using singlet fission — a “dream” process where one high-energy photon splits into two lower-energy excitons — ...
From left, graduate student Bryan Kelly, Associate Professor Mark Spieker and Professor Alexander Volya in the John D. Fox Superconducting Linear Accelerator Laboratory at Florida State University. In ...
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Japanese researchers develop spin-flip material to increase solar panel efficiency by up to 130%
Spin-flip metal complexes capture duplicated excitons produced through singlet fission Proof-of-concept experiments reached over 110% to about 130% quantum yield Solid-state integration remains ...
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