
When a lithium battery is subjected to a current draw that exceeds its designed limits, several detrimental effects can occur:Heat Generation Excessive current leads to significant heat generation. . Voltage Drop High current draw results in a substantial voltage drop across the battery’s terminals. . Electrochemical Degradation The rapid movement of ions under high current conditions can accelerate the degradation of the battery’s electrodes. . [pdf]
This paper documents an experimental investigation that studies the long-term impact of current ripple on battery performance degradation. A novel test environment has been designed to thermally manage the cells to 25 °C while simultaneously exciting the cells with a coupled DC and AC load profile that is representative of real-world vehicle use.
This applies in particular for EV batteries with an expected lifetime of more than ten years. This study investigates the influence of alternating current (ac) profiles on the lifetime of lithium-ion batteries. High-energy battery cells were tested for more than 1500 equivalent full cycles to practically check the influence of current ripples.
Therefore, the influence of alternating and ripple currents on the degradation of LIBs (lithium-ion batteries) has been investigated in recent years [5, 6, 7, 8, 9]. However, these long-term studies conclude different concerning the influence of the ripples.
Besides its effect on the life time of the battery cells, the ripple current has potential benefits for the state of health diagnosis of the battery. The voltage response of the battery cells to the high frequent stimulations of the ripple current contains information of the cell’s impedance spectrum, which changes with the aging process.
High frequency current oscillations, or ripple, if unhindered will enter the vehicle’s battery system. Real-world measurements of the current on the high voltage bus of a series hybrid electric vehicle (HEV) show that significant current perturbations ranging from 10 Hz to in excess of 10 kHz are present.
In [40, 41], the long-term effects of superimposed current ripple at from 55 Hz up to 20 kHz on battery ageing using 18650 model batteries have been investigated.

Up until the early 1990s, solar arrays used in space primarily used solar cells. Since the early 1990s, -based solar cells became favored over silicon because they have a higher efficiency and degrade more slowly than silicon in the space radiation environment. The most efficient solar cells currently in production are now . These use a combination of several layers of indium gallium phosphide, galli. [pdf]
Solar cell efficiency: According to NASA’s assessment (NASA, 2022), the state of the practice of solar cell efficiency in space today is 33%, while the state of the art is 70% (based on theoretical limits of 6-junction solar cells in laboratories today).
More specifically, III-V solar cells have become the standard technology for space power generation, mainly due to their high efficiency, reliability and ability to be integrated into very lightweight panels.
Crystalline silicon solar cell-based panels were used earlier to power satellites. At present, space solar arrays use III–V compound-based multijunction solar cells. Each solar cell has germanium, gallium indium arsenide, and gallium indium phosphide junction layers monolithically grown on a Ge wafer.
The International Space Station also uses solar arrays to power everything on the station. The 262,400 solar cells cover around 27,000 square feet (2,500 m 2) of space.
Si solar cells realized about 25% efficiency (research results on small area cells). The efficiency of the solar cell may be improved by combining two semiconductor p/n-junctions with different band gaps. For a one band gap cell the optimum efficiency is obtained for band gaps between 1.1 eV (Si) and 1.45 eV (GaAs).
Since the early 1990s, Gallium arsenide -based solar cells became favored over silicon because they have a higher efficiency and degrade more slowly than silicon in the space radiation environment. The most efficient solar cells currently in production are now multi-junction photovoltaic cells.

SHJ has the highest efficiency amongst crystalline silicon solar cells in both laboratory (world record efficiency) and commercial production (average efficiency). In 2023, the average efficiency for commercial SHJ cells was 25.0%, compared with 24.9% for n-type TOPCon and 23.3% for p-type PERC. The high efficiency is owed mostly to very high open-circuit voltages—consistently over 700 mV—as a result of excellent surface passivation. Since 2023, SHJ bottom cells in Per. Silicon heterojunction (SHJ) solar cells have achieved a record efficiency of 26.81% in a front/back-contacted (FBC) configuration. [pdf]
Silicon heterojunction (SHJ) solar cells have achieved a record efficiency of 26.81% in a front/back-contacted (FBC) configuration. Moreover, thanks to their advantageous high VOC and good infrared response, SHJ solar cells can be further combined with wide bandgap perovskite cells forming tandem devices to enable efficiencies well above 33%.
The application of silicon heterojunction solar cells for ultra-high efficiency perovskite/c-Si and III-V/c-Si tandem devices is also reviewed. In the last, the perspective, challenge and potential solutions of silicon heterojunction solar cells, as well as the tandem solar cells are discussed. 1. Introduction
SHJ solar cells have reached a record efficiency of 26.81% with a high VOC of 751.4 mV in a front/back-contacted (FBC) configuration, and 26.7% in an interdigitated back-contacted (IBC) architecture . Till the end of 2022, the best TOPCon solar cell efficiency has reached 26.4% and POLO-IBC demonstrated an efficiency of 26.1% .
In 2017, Kaneka Corporation in Japan realized heterojunction back contact (HBC) solar cell with an efficiency of up to 26.7% (JSC of 42.5 mA·cm −2) 25, 26, and recently, LONGi Corporation in China has announced a new record efficiency of 27.30% 16.
They are a hybrid technology, combining aspects of conventional crystalline solar cells with thin-film solar cells. Silicon heterojunction-based solar panels are commercially mass-produced for residential and utility markets.
Heterojunction solar cells (HJT), variously known as Silicon heterojunctions (SHJ) or Heterojunction with Intrinsic Thin Layer (HIT), are a family of photovoltaic cell technologies based on a heterojunction formed between semiconductors with dissimilar band gaps.
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