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OKIsItJustMe

(19,938 posts)
Fri May 25, 2012, 04:21 PM May 2012

Taking Solar Technology Up a Notch—New inexpensive, environmentally friendly solar cell shines…

http://www.northwestern.edu/newscenter/stories/2012/05/solid-state-solar-cell.html
[font face=Serif]May 23, 2012

[font size=5]Taking Solar Technology Up a Notch[/font]

[font size=4]New inexpensive, environmentally friendly solar cell shines with potential[/font]

By Megan Fellman

[font size=3]EVANSTON, Ill. --- The limitations of conventional and current solar cells include high production cost, low operating efficiency and durability, and many cells rely on toxic and scarce materials. Northwestern University researchers have developed a new solar cell that, in principle, will minimize all of these solar energy technology limitations.

In particular, the device is the first to solve the problem of the Grätzel cell, a promising low-cost and environmentally friendly solar cell with a significant disadvantage: it leaks. The dye-sensitized cell’s electrolyte is made of an organic liquid, which can leak and corrode the solar cell itself.

Grätzel cells use a molecular dye to absorb sunlight and convert it to electricity, much like chlorophyll in plants. But the cells typically don’t last more than 18 months, making them commercially unviable. Researchers have been searching for an alternative for two decades.

At Northwestern, where interdisciplinary collaboration is a cornerstone, nanotechnology expert Robert P. H. Chang challenged chemist Mercouri Kanatzidis with the problem of the Grätzel cell. Kanatzidis’ solution was a new material for the electrolyte that actually starts as a liquid but ends up a solid mass. Thus, the new all solid-state solar cell is inherently stable.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature11067
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Taking Solar Technology Up a Notch—New inexpensive, environmentally friendly solar cell shines… (Original Post) OKIsItJustMe May 2012 OP
Cheap Dye-Sensitized Solar Cell Moves toward Commercialization OKIsItJustMe Jun 2012 #1

OKIsItJustMe

(19,938 posts)
1. Cheap Dye-Sensitized Solar Cell Moves toward Commercialization
Tue Jun 5, 2012, 03:28 PM
Jun 2012
http://www.technologyreview.com/news/428025/cheap-dye-sensitized-solar-cell-moves-toward/
[font face=Serif][font size=5]Cheap Dye-Sensitized Solar Cell Moves toward Commercialization[/font]
[font size=4]Printable photovoltaics could become viable, thanks to a new advance.[/font]

Wednesday, May 30, 2012 | By Peter Fairley

[font size=3]Easy-to-make solar cells that capture light with dyes have garnered an impressive string of scientific awards, including the Millennium Technology Prize in 2010. Yet they've had little commercial impact since their invention in 1988.

A novel design reported by Northwestern University researchers last week could change that, delivering a device that eliminates the dye-sensitized solar cell's inherent liability: its leak-prone and corrosive liquid electrolyte.

Unlike thin-film and silicon panels, dye-based panels can be produced in cheap roll-to-roll processes akin to printing. So even if they are less efficient than silicon solar cells, they could prove cost-effective.

The Northwestern development is just the latest in a string of advances in what Michael McGehee, director of Stanford University's Center for Advanced Molecular Photovoltaics, recently dubbed a "renaissance" in dye-sensitized cells. Recent advances in the field could finally transform these elegant scientific curiosities into practical energy-generation devices.

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