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Author

Xiaohang Chen

Bio: Xiaohang Chen is an academic researcher from Xiamen University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Photovoltaic system & Thermophotovoltaic. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 35 publications receiving 621 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Shanhe Su1, Tie Liu1, Yuan Wang1, Xiaohang Chen1, Jintong Wang, Jincan Chen1 
TL;DR: In this article, an electric and thermal model of the hybrid device consisting of a dye-sensitized solar cell (DSSC) and a thermoelectric generator (TEG) is studied for exploiting the solar full spectrum.

72 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a new hybrid system is proposed, in which the effects of multi-irreversibilities resulting from the activation, concentration, and ohmic overpotentials in the PAFC, Joule heat and heat leak in the TG, finite-rate heat transfer between the TG and the heat reservoirs, and heat leakage from the PFC to the environment are taken into account.

55 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a PEM fuel cell, a semiconductor thermoelectric generator, and a regenerator were derived to obtain the operating electric currents in the fuel cell and the generator.

51 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Apr 2016-Energy
TL;DR: In this article, a generic model of the hybrid system consisting of a phosphoric acid fuel cell (PAFC) and a heat-driven refrigerator is originally established, and the maximum equivalent power output density and the corresponding efficiency of a hybrid system are calculated.

51 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Zhimin Yang1, Wangyang Li1, Xiaohang Chen1, Shanhe Su1, Guoxing Lin1, Jincan Chen1 
TL;DR: In this paper, an updated model of the solar spectrum splitting photovoltaic cell-thermoelectric generator system was used to derive the analytical expression of the systemic efficiency.

50 citations


Cited by
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Journal Article
TL;DR: Temperature-dependent photoemission-yield measurements from GaN show strong evidence for photon-enhanced thermionic emission, and calculated efficiencies for idealized devices can exceed the theoretical limits of single-junction photovoltaic cells.
Abstract: Solar-energy conversion usually takes one of two forms: the 'quantum' approach, which uses the large per-photon energy of solar radiation to excite electrons, as in photovoltaic cells, or the 'thermal' approach, which uses concentrated sunlight as a thermal-energy source to indirectly produce electricity using a heat engine. Here we present a new concept for solar electricity generation, photon-enhanced thermionic emission, which combines quantum and thermal mechanisms into a single physical process. The device is based on thermionic emission of photoexcited electrons from a semiconductor cathode at high temperature. Temperature-dependent photoemission-yield measurements from GaN show strong evidence for photon-enhanced thermionic emission, and calculated efficiencies for idealized devices can exceed the theoretical limits of single-junction photovoltaic cells. The proposed solar converter would operate at temperatures exceeding 200 degrees C, enabling its waste heat to be used to power a secondary thermal engine, boosting theoretical combined conversion efficiencies above 50%.

319 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive review of the possible layout configurations of hybrid power plants based on the integration of solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC) and gas turbine (GT) technologies is presented.

272 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is hoped this review can guide people to pay more attention to the development of green energy system to generate pollution-free H 2 energy, which will realize the whole process of H 2 production with low cost, pollution- free and energy sustainability conversion.
Abstract: Hydrogen (H2) production is a latent feasibility of renewable clean energy. The industrial H2 production is obtained from reforming of natural gas, which consumes a large amount of nonrenewable energy and simultaneously produces greenhouse gas carbon dioxide. Electrochemical water splitting is a promising approach for the H2 production, which is sustainable and pollution-free. Therefore, developing efficient and economic technologies for electrochemical water splitting has been an important goal for researchers around the world. The utilization of green energy systems to reduce overall energy consumption is more important for H2 production. Harvesting and converting energy from the environment by different green energy systems for water splitting can efficiently decrease the external power consumption. A variety of green energy systems for efficient producing H2, such as two-electrode electrolysis of water, water splitting driven by photoelectrode devices, solar cells, thermoelectric devices, triboelectric nanogenerator, pyroelectric device or electrochemical water-gas shift device, have been developed recently. In this review, some notable progress made in the different green energy cells for water splitting is discussed in detail. We hoped this review can guide people to pay more attention to the development of green energy system to generate pollution-free H2 energy, which will realize the whole process of H2 production with low cost, pollution-free and energy sustainability conversion.

213 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A modified version of the TLBO algorithm is introduced and applied for the multi-objective optimization of a two stage thermoelectric cooler (TEC) and the results are validated by comparing with those obtained by using the basic TLBO, genetic algorithm, particle swarm optimization (PSO) and artificial bee colony (ABC) algorithms.

177 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review presents the developmental milestones, distills the complex photophysical findings, and highlights the challenges and opportunities in this emerging field of halide perovskites hot-carrier cooling.
Abstract: Rapid hot-carrier cooling is a major loss channel in solar cells. Thermodynamic calculations reveal a 66% solar conversion efficiency for single junction cells (under 1 sun illumination) if these hot carriers are harvested before cooling to the lattice temperature. A reduced hot-carrier cooling rate for efficient extraction is a key enabler to this disruptive technology. Recently, halide perovskites emerge as promising candidates with favorable hot-carrier properties: slow hot-carrier cooling lifetimes several orders of magnitude longer than conventional solar cell absorbers, long-range hot-carrier transport (up to ≈600 nm), and highly efficient hot-carrier extraction (up to ≈83%). This review presents the developmental milestones, distills the complex photophysical findings, and highlights the challenges and opportunities in this emerging field. A developmental toolbox for engineering the slow hot-carrier cooling properties in halide perovskites and prospects for perovskite hot-carrier solar cells are also discussed.

173 citations