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Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Solar cell efficiency receives a transparent boost

Solar cell efficiency receives a transparent boost

Updated 9:48 p.m., Tuesday, August 21, 2012

  • Kathy Woody, associate scientist for the Phillips 66 alternative energy team, examines an organic photovoltaic cell. Photo: Courtesy Photo / HC
    Kathy Woody, associate scientist for the Phillips 66 alternative energy team, examines an organic photovoltaic cell. Photo: Courtesy Photo / HC

Think about this during these dog days of summer: Researchers are working to capture the sun's rays more efficiently and turn them into electricity, using a see-through solar panel no thicker than a plastic grocery bag.

Officials with Phillips 66 said Tuesday that their partnership with California startup Solarmer Energy and a Chinese university has yielded the most efficient polymer-based organic solar cell yet, a milestone that puts them closer to marketing the technology.

Byron Johnson, manager of sustainability technologies at Houston-based Phillips 66, said the work reflects the company's commitment to renewable technologies, even though its core business remains rooted in the oil industry.

"Most of our work involves petrochemicals," he said. "That is our business. But we want to understand all energy sources and also participate in them."

His division works with biofuels, along with other renewable energy sources, including solar.
Vishal Shrotriya, a spokesman for Solarmer, said the partnership with Phillips 66 and South China University of Technology began two years ago, before Phillips 66 split from ConocoPhillips.
Solarmer, based in El Monte, Calif., originally licensed the organic solar cell technology from the University of California at Los Angeles, Shrotriya said.

Unlike conventional silicon solar panels, polymer-based organic solar cells are thin and flexible. They're also far less expensive to manufacture, Shrotriya said.

But they also are less efficient at converting sunlight to electricity.

The partnership announced Tuesday that its technology had been certified by the Newport Technology & Application Center's Photovoltaic Lab in Long Beach, Calif., as achieving 9.31 percent efficiency - that is, the percent at which the technology converts photons, or sunlight, to electrons, or electricity.

Commercially viable?
That's a record for power conversion efficiency for polymer-based photovoltaic cells, although Johnson said the technology will have to reach 12 percent to 15 percent efficiency to become commercially viable.

Silicon solar panels typically operate at about 20 percent efficiency, Shrotriya said.
He and Johnson said organic solar cells offer some advantages over silicon solar panels, despite being less efficient.

They're cheaper, for one thing.

Silicon panels typically cost three to five times as much to make, Johnson said.

Light-weight, flexible
Silicon panels also are more fragile, while organic solar cells are light-weight and flexible.
Johnson suggested they could be taken to remote locations, for camping or military use. Ultimately, he said, they may be used to power buildings, rolled across the windows like tinted film.

"They're transparent, and sunlight could come through and generate enough electricity for the building itself," Johnson said.

Andrew Barron, a professor of chemistry and materials science at Rice University, said the 9.31 percent efficiency rate is an achievement.

But he said organic solar technology also has some inherent drawbacks. It degrades far more quickly than silicon solar technology, he said, giving it a relatively short lifespan.

And silicon technology is becoming cheaper, making the cost differential less important, Barron said.
"It's a nice technical advance," he said. "It sets a benchmark for other people to try to improve. But it's not going to be a commercial reality anytime soon unless they have a significant change in performance."

jeannie.kever@chron.com

http://www.chron.com/business/article/Solar-cell-efficiency-receives-a-transparent-boost-3805462.php

Monday, August 13, 2012

Physics researcher develops nanoparticle coating for solar panels

A University of Houston (UH) researcher has developed a nanoparticle coating for solar panels that makes it easier to keep the panels clean, which helps maintain their efficiency and reduces the maintenance and operations costs.

The patent-pending coating developed by physics professor Seamus "Shay" Curran, director of UH's Institute for NanoEnergy, has successfully undergone testing at the Dublin Institute for Technology and will undergo field trials being conducted by an engineering firm in North Carolina.

Curran said the June testing in Ireland and the field trials being done at Livingston & Haven in Charlotte, N.C., represent significant steps forward in moving the coating and a related technology to the marketplace. A demonstration of the coating was conducted Friday (Aug. 10, 2012) at Livingston & Haven.

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Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Nano Breakthrough Paves Way For Super Cheap Solar Panels

A new breakthrough will enable manufacturers to make efficient photovoltaics using almost any semiconductor, including cheap and abundant materials like metal oxides, sulfides, and phosphides.

A typical photovoltaic cell is built with silicon and treated with chemicals. This treatment is called “doping,” and it creates the driving force needed to extract power from the cell. Photovoltaics can also be built with cheaper materials but many of these can’t be doped chemically. But a method developed by Professor Alex Zettl’s research group at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and University of California at Berkeley makes it possible to dope nearly any semiconductor by applying an electric field instead of chemicals. The method is described in a paper published in the journal Nano Letters.

Read more

How The Most-Efficient Solar Module Gets Made

Semprius' the North Carolina-based company utilizes a breakthrough micro-printing process to produce the solar cells en masse and load them onto specially designed large arrays to collect power from the sun.

The printing process allows Semprius to print Solar Junction's cells at a size no larger than a dot from a pen, the world's smallest solar cell. This is good for a few reasons.