HUGHES SPACE AND COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY
Communications and Customer Relations
P.O. Box 92919 (S10/S323)
Los Angeles, CA 90009
(310) 364-6363 www.hughespace.com
SOLAR CELL EFFICIENCY NEARLY DOUBLED BY HUGHES' SPECTROLAB
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 16, 1997-- Spectrolab Incorporated, a unit of Hughes
Electronics Corporation, has announced the successful operation of a
revolutionary dual-junction gallium arsenide solar cell which will nearly
double the efficiency of traditional silicon cells used on spacecraft solar array panels.
Spectrolab's gallium arsenide dual-junction solar cells are the result
of more than 10 years of development, but with the launch of PanAmSat
Corporation's PAS-5 satellite on Aug. 27, the cells made their first voyage
into space and are the first in use on a commercial communications
satellite.
"Because the power is nearly doubled, these dual-junction cells enable
us to provide solar panels which are either twice the power or half the
weight," said Dieter Zemmrich, president of Spectrolab. "This advanced
technology enables our customers to be more flexible in their satellite
design, a benefit which has great competitive advantage."
A solar cell is basically a semiconductor with the ability to convert
the light from the sun into electrical energy. The dual-junction gallium
arsenide solar cells can convert 21.6 percent of the sun's energy into
power, as compared to the traditional silicon solar cells, which can
convert only 12.3 percent.
Dual-junction solar cells measure approximately 4.2 square inches in
area and 0.0055 inches in thickness. The cells are "grown," atom by atom,
in an epitaxial growth chamber using 100-millimeter diameter single crystal
germanium wafers as a supporting substrate. The germanium wafer provides
the crystalline structure upon which to "grow" the single crystal solar cell layer.
Two solar cells are layered on top of each other, and because each
converts a different part of the light spectrum, the solar cell can more
efficiently convert sunlight into electrical power. As the sun's ray hits
the top layer of gallium indium phosphide, short wavelengths are converted
into electrical power. Because gallium indium phosphide is transparent to
long wavelengths, these actually pass through to the gallium arsenide
layer, where they too are converted into electrical power, thus creating
the second or dual junction. This simultaneous function is unique to the
dual-junction solar cells and is the basis for the increased efficiency.
The PAS-5 satellite, built by Hughes Space and Communications Company,
uses nearly 15,000 dual-junction gallium arsenide solar cells to convert
the sun's rays into 10 kilowatts of power at beginning of life, a
substantial increase over the 4.8 kilowatts provided by a standard HS 601
satellite. PAS-5's 10 kilowatts will provide the power necessary to
broadcast direct-to-home and other television services in Latin America for
15 years.
Spectrolab Incorporated is headquartered in Sylmar, Calif., and is a
leading supplier of solar cells, solar panels, searchlights and solar
simulators. The company, founded in 1956, has been supplying solar array
panels to the space industry for nearly 40 years. Pioneer 1, launched in
1958, carried Spectrolab's first body-mounted panels. The following year,
Explorer 6 became the first satellite to use Spectrolab's solar arrays
instead of body-mounted panels. Hughes acquired Spectrolab in 1975, and it
is a major supplier of solar cells to another Hughes Electronics unit,
Hughes Space and Communications Company, the world's leading commercial
communications satellite manufacturer, having built nearly 40 percent of
those in operation.
Spectrolab is a unit of Hughes Electronics Corporation. The earnings of
Hughes Electronics are used to calculate the earnings per share
attributable to GMH (NYSE symbol) common stock.