A team of researchers led by experts at
Durham
University has announced plans for one of the UK's largest ever research
projects into photovoltaic solar energy.
The four-year £6.3m PV-21 programme will focus on making thin-film light
absorbing cells for solar panels from sustainable and affordable materials.
The project begins in April 2008 and is being funded by the
Engineering
and Physical Sciences Research Council under the
Supergen
initiative.
Eight UK universities, led by Durham, are involved in the project: Bangor,
Bath, Cranfield, Edinburgh, Imperial College London, Northumbria and
Southampton.
They will work together with nine industrial partners towards a "medium to
long-term goal" of making solar energy more competitive and sustainable,
particularly in light of the recent rise in fossil fuel prices.
Solar cells are currently made from components such as the rare and expensive
metal indium which costs approximately £320 a kilogram. The research team
intends to reduce the thickness of the cells to cut production costs.
Making a solar semiconductor thinner by one millionth of a metre in solar
cells generating one gigawatt of power could save 50 tonnes of material, the
researchers estimate.
The team will also experiment with sustainable low-cost materials which could
be used in the manufacturing of solar cells and on the use of nanotechnology and
dyes on ultra-thin silicon to capture increased amounts of energy from the Sun's
rays.
Principal investigator Ken Durose, a professor in the Department of Physics
at Durham University, said: "With the rapid increase in fossil fuel prices and
the recent government announcement about investment in nuclear power it is even
more important that we look at long-term future energy generation from solar
power.
"At present you would need tens of tonnes of very rare and expensive
materials for large scale production of solar cells to produce sizeable amounts
of power.
"Some of the materials currently used may not be sustainable in 20 years'
time which is why we have to conduct research into alternative materials that
are cheaper to buy and more sustainable.
"Our medium to long-term goal is to make a major contribution to achieving
competitive photovoltaic solar energy, which we hope will lead to an uptake in
the use of solar power."
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