Using diodes and transistors as solar cells

When you get down to it, solar cells aren’t much different from the diodes and transistors in your parts drawers or inside your beloved electronics. They’re both made of silicon or some other semiconductor, and surprisingly can produce electricity in the presence of light. Here’s two semiconductors-as-solar panel projects that rolled into the tip line over the past few days.

[Steven Dufresne] cut open a 2N3055 power transistor to expose the semiconductor material to light. In full sunlight, he was able to produce 500 millivolts and 5.5 milliamps. In other words, he’d need around 5000 of these transistors wired up to turn on a compact fluorescent light bulb. A small calculator has a much lower power requirement, so after opening up five transistors he was able to make a solar-powered calculator with a handful of transistors.

[Sarang] was studying solar cells and realized a standard silicon diode is very similar; both are p-n junctions and the only real difference is the surface area. He connected a 1N4148 to a multimeter and to his surprise it worked. [Sarang] is able to get about 150 millivolts out of his diode with the help of a magnifying glass. While he doubts his diode is more efficient than a normal solar cell, he thinks it could be useful in low-cost, low power applications. We’re thinking this might be useful as a high-intensity light detector for a solar cooker or similar.

After the break, you can check out the videos [Steven] and [Sarang] put up demonstrating their solar cells.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2bUc8RqSFXs&w=470]

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ww_a9JS9IJ8&w=470]

Comments

  1. Mark says:

    Sounds like a waste of some nice transistors to me.

    • stevendpe says:

      Naw, I can still desolder and then use them – probably will someday. Just have to be extra careful of the delicate wires. At least I stopped myself from digging up five more to connect in parallel for more current.

  2. Jeff says:

    Interesting configuration for the transistors. I’m not in a position at the moment to think this through completely, so I’ll just put it out there to discuss.

    It appears the energy is produced at the PN junction. Couldn’t you tie both E and C to the previous transistor’s B and effectively have your power sources in series/parallel? Wouldn’t that increase your current output?

    • stevendpe says:

      Jeff, I measured C/E with respect to B and got the very same voltage and current as with just C with respect to B. This was with cool white compact fluorescents as light source. Strange, I know.

  3. Bitned says:

    Hey have you tried to illuminate leds? it’s very sipler i think…

  4. adric says:

    few years back the bbc/pbs had a show called “Rough Science” http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1292463/ each season they would grab a group of sciency people and put them somewhere and task them with objectives (kinda like Survivor, without the lameness) In the Ep linked above they sand off the top of a transistor and use it as a light detector to make a light beam communicator.

    led’s will also generate a small voltage.

  5. bio says:

    quick way to get the top open is to shoot the top with a BB gun

  6. MrX says:

    The 1N4148 converts HEAT to current. The temperature-voltage curves are in the datasheet.

  7. qwerty says:

    Pretty old trick, the first time I saw this was in the mid 70s. Not worth the waste of an old though still very useable transistor if you need a real solar cell, but informative.

  8. Wilfred says:

    I tried this back in the early eighties when i was about 12, was a very cool experiment!

  9. NewCommentor1283 says:

    in my opingion, logically, there theoretically would be 5 or 6 possibilities of failure mode in a transistor;
    e-c open, e-c short,
    e-b open, e-b short,
    all short, all open(very unlikely)

    so is there a 1 in ~5 chance of using a blown transistor as a solarcell?

    hmmm next time i have a to3 thats blown, ill try it and see! 🙂

    ill post results if it works,,, one day…

  10. Hirudinea says:

    Good to know for the coming apocalypse.

  11. Galane says:

    Connect the power pins on an EEPROM, point the clear window at a light source and you have a little solar cell.

  12. Microguy says:

    I was surprised years ago, when I opened up some old “tin can” type transistors, to see a faint light as they operated.

    It had to be dark, because there was only a little bit of light. But they were acting like LED’s.

    Come to think of it, this could be a pretty cool project, some digital circuit, with a bunch of cut open transistors, emitting light everywhere…

  13. mstone says:

    The trouble with diodes and LEDs is that they don’t have enough area to give you much current. I’ve measured LEDs putting out 1-2v, but only about 10nA.

    And while this is a neat hack, I see 2n3055s listed at Mouser for about $1.25 each in lots of 100. That’s kind of pricey for low-yield solar.

    If you want cheap-and-cheerful solar, flip the circuit around and buy a $1 disposable calculator from Walmart. The solar cell in one of those will put out about 100mA, IIRC. This is also the season when solar-charged LED lawn spikes go on sale, and those only cost a couple bucks each. You get a fairly nice solar cell, a detector of some kind, a rechargeable battery, an LED, and possibly a few other components worth using.

  14. o4tuna says:

    I read a radio shack book about electronics back in the 70s, was it by Forrest Mims? Anyways, in the discussion of how holes work, I got the distinct impression that it was obvious that all semiconductor devices would emit light while operating, and if exposed to light, would produce electricity. Which is why they’re all (unless this is the desired function) in either sealed cans or black ceramic/plastic cases…
    I would think an “exposed” VLSI chip would have all kinds of light induced error problems…

  15. rbarrabas says:

    Power transistors make good alpha particle detectors.

    If you saw off the top and place the emitter from an old smoke detector near the die, you get a series of extremely short pulses (less than 1us, shorter than I can easily measure) which can be amplified and logged.

    The would also probably detect muons and other cosmic ray species, but the capture aperture is not very big.

    I strongly suspect (but cannot prove) that the height of the pulse reflects the total energy of the particle and the angle of incidence of the particle to the die. If this is correct, it would be a way to make inexpensive alpha (and other particle) spectrometers as well.

    Also, an array of these could detect sequential incident particles (for energetic particles, such as cosmic rays), and thus give an idea of the angle of incidence – telling you roughly which direction the particle came from.

    Just a thought…

    • stevendpe says:

      This I gotta try! I have the transistors already cut open, I have dies from old smoke detector tucked safely away, now I just need to make an amplifier circuit. Thanks!

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