← Back to context Comment by selimthegrim 1 year ago I wonder what happened to singlet fission cells and other things trying to get around the SQ limit 2 comments selimthegrim Reply pfdietz 1 year ago Still being worked on.https://interestingengineering.com/energy/paderborns-new-sol... selimthegrim 1 year ago Thanks for the link - I used to be peripherally involved in this field and last I heard MIT (Baldo et al.) had resorted to some hafnium oxynitride layer, which is really not gonna drive costs down at all.
pfdietz 1 year ago Still being worked on.https://interestingengineering.com/energy/paderborns-new-sol... selimthegrim 1 year ago Thanks for the link - I used to be peripherally involved in this field and last I heard MIT (Baldo et al.) had resorted to some hafnium oxynitride layer, which is really not gonna drive costs down at all.
selimthegrim 1 year ago Thanks for the link - I used to be peripherally involved in this field and last I heard MIT (Baldo et al.) had resorted to some hafnium oxynitride layer, which is really not gonna drive costs down at all.
Still being worked on.
https://interestingengineering.com/energy/paderborns-new-sol...
Thanks for the link - I used to be peripherally involved in this field and last I heard MIT (Baldo et al.) had resorted to some hafnium oxynitride layer, which is really not gonna drive costs down at all.