Professor Martin Green
How a 50% efficiency leap unlocked a $1tn industry
From the creation of the world鈥檚 most efficient solar cell technology to the democratisation of solar power itself 鈥 here鈥檚 how our research is powering a global solar revolution.
Throughout the last five decades, Professor Martin Green and his team of researchers at UNSW have fundamentally transformed photovoltaic technology through the creation of the Passivated Emitter and Rear Cell (PERC) and other advanced cell technologies. In creating such high-performance, low-cost solar options, they鈥檝e paved the way for solar power to become our greatest asset in finding a solution to the global climate crisis.
The 1985 UNSW team which developed the PERC cell.听Front row: Michael Taouk, Martin Green, Jianhua Zhao and Stuart Wenham.听Second row: Andrew Blakers and Mike Willison.听Back row: Ted Szpitalak, Mohan Narayanan and CheeMun Chong.听Insert, Aihua Wang.
The pioneering work of Professor Green and his team first made an impact after the group produced solar cells with 18% efficiency 鈥 besting the previous world record. 鈥淲e set our first record for solar performance in 1983 and then for the next 31 years we held that record,鈥 says Professor Green. While the team went on to achieve results of 20% (a number previously thought to be the practical limit for a single-layer silicon solar cell), it was the creation of the PERC that boosted efficiency to 25%.听
With this development, PERC technology became the world鈥檚 most commercially viable and efficient silicon solar cell technology and is now the lowest cost option for bulk electricity supply across the globe. 鈥淲e made the world鈥檚 best cells in the lab,鈥 explains Professor Green.听
"The technology we developed has since accounted for 90% of the global production of solar."
- Professor Martin Green
While the PERC made up about 90% of the world鈥檚 solar cell manufacturing output in 2022, the impact of the team鈥檚 work is only set to rise with TOPCon 鈥 another technology pioneered by the team, boosting this number in 2023.听
Going global
While the technology itself made a significant global impact, so too did the way it was shared with the world. Several of Professor Green鈥檚 UNSW students went on to play a major role in the establishment of the solar manufacturing industry in Asia. This created strong competition within the market, which was followed by a major reduction in cost for the solar cell technology.听
Between 2008-2020, the wholesale price of solar dropped by a factor of 24, from above US$4/Watt to US$0.17/Watt. 鈥淭hat was a by-product of our work we weren鈥檛 really anticipating but it鈥檚 been just as important or perhaps even more important for the development of low-cost solar than our technical work,鈥 says Professor Green.听
This significant cost reduction has not only made solar an affordable option for global communities and industries alike but has allowed for a sizeable move to zero-emissions electricity. 鈥淪ince 2020, solar has transitioned to being a keystone strategy for mitigating climate change.鈥澨
鈥淚f you really want a change, you have to make green energy cheaper, and this is what鈥檚 driving the uptake of solar in Australia now.鈥澨
- Professor Martin Green
In 2008 Martin Green and his team built a wafer containing 6 large PERC cells which achieved 25% efficiency.
While it initially took some time for the cost reduction to become globally recognised, the acknowledged the outcome in 2020. 鈥淭hey declared that solar now offered the cheapest electricity in history,鈥 says Professor Green. 鈥淭hey are now calling for the uptake of solar and wind as something we should be doing immediately.鈥澨
King Charles III with Professor Martin Green at the 2023 QEPrize awards ceremony. Image: QEPrize
Forward focused
For Professor Green and his team, the far-reaching impact of their research has been its own reward after years of hard work. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 know we were doing it at the time 鈥 the main motivation for us was setting new efficiency records,鈥 he explains. 鈥淥ver those 31 years we improved the performance of the cells by 50% in relative terms, but it took about 18 steps over those 31 years.鈥
With PERC solar cells now commercially standard throughout the globe, and with sales of technology pioneered by his team expected to exceed US $1 trillion by 2030, Professor Green and his team are continuing to develop, adapt and re-visit their research. 鈥淵ou need a really experienced team to be able to sustain the effort and stop you from going around in circles,鈥 adds Professor Green.
鈥淵ou need to be making progress and when you do get something to work, you take full advantage of that insight鈥 Then you look for the next idea.鈥澨
听- Professor Martin Green
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