All the latest UK technology news, reviews and analysis

Boffins boost solar cell efficiency

by Robert Jaques

25 Feb 2008

Comment: 1

  • Tweet this
The Sun
Researchers promise solar cells which are more easy to manufacture and implement

A team of US researchers has developed an anode coating strategy which they claim significantly enhances the efficiency of solar energy power conversion.

The "breakthrough" at Northwestern University promises cheaper solar cells which are more easy to manufacture and implement.

Tobin J. Marks, a research professor in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, and Robert Chang, professor of materials science and engineering in the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science, led the research team.

The scientists explained that solar cells fabricated from plastic-like organic materials are attractive because they can be printed cheaply and quickly by a process similar to printing a newspaper, i.e. roll-to-roll processing.

To date, the most successful type of plastic photovoltaic cell is called a 'bulk-heterojunction cell'.

This uses a layer of a mixture of a semi-conducting polymer (an electron donor) and a fullerene (an electron acceptor) sandwiched between two electrodes, one a transparent electrically conducting electrode (the anode, which is usually a tin-doped indium oxide) and a metal (the cathode) such as aluminium.

When light enters through the transparent conducting electrode and strikes the light-absorbing polymer layer, electricity flows due to formation of pairs of electrons and holes that separate and move to the cathode and anode respectively.

The Northwestern researchers employed a laser deposition technique that coats the anode with a very thin (5 to 10 nanometre) and layer of nickel oxide.

This material is an excellent conductor for extracting holes from the irradiated cell but, equally important, is an efficient 'blocker' which prevents misdirected electrons from straying to the 'wrong' electrode (the anode), which would compromise the cell energy conversion efficiency.

"In contrast to earlier approaches for anode coating, the Northwestern nickel oxide coating is cheap, electrically homogeneous and non-corrosive," the team stated.

"In the case of model bulk-heterojunction cells, the Northwestern team has increased the cell voltage by approximately 40 per cent and the power conversion efficiency from approximately three to four per cent to 5.2 to 5.6 per cent."

The researchers are currently working on further tuning the anode coating technique for increased hole extraction and electron blocking efficiency and moving to production-scaling experiments on flexible substrates.

Do you agree?

 

Add your comment

We won't publish your address
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms & Conditions. Your comment will be moderated before publication.

Poll

IT priorities for 2012

What is the most important IT priority for your company this year?

99%

0%

1%

0%

0%

Connect with V3.co.uk

Sign up to our daily or weekly newsletters

Accurev

Top 5 software development challenges

This paper focuses on a series of best practices and techniques for development teams looking to improve their software development processes

Talend

Rubbish in, rubbish enterprise

Why good data management at all levels is essential in the modern business (video, 6mins)

Java developer (J2EE/Web) - Nr Warrington (off M6)

Java / J2EE analyst programmer with experience of building...

Crystal Reports Developer London or Dublin £340 per day

Crystal Reports Developer London or Dublin £340 per day...

Systems Administrator

Our client is a major Broadcasting company seeking a...

Support Engineer - Linux/ Windows

Support Engineer required to work for leading Online...

To send to more than one email address, simply separate each address with a comma.