The global search for a sustainable energy supply is making significant strides at Wake Forest University as researchers at the university’s Center for Nanotechnology and Molecular Materials have announced that they have pushed the efficiency of plastic solar cells to more than 6 percent.Before 2005, the highest efficiency from organic cells was 3 percent. That year, the Wake Forest team produced almost 5 percent. Now, they've reached six. In just two years, they've doubled the efficiency. Imagine what scientists could do if they were given serious support from the federal government. Imagine.
In a paper to be published in an upcoming issue of the journal Applied Physics Letters, Wake Forest researchers describe how they have achieved record efficiency for organic or flexible, plastic solar cells by creating “nano-filaments” within light absorbing plastic, similar to the veins in tree leaves. This allows for the use of thicker absorbing layers in the devices, which capture more of the sun’s light.
Efficient plastic solar cells are extremely desirable because they are inexpensive and light weight, especially in comparison to traditional silicon solar panels. Traditional solar panels are heavy and bulky and convert about 12 percent of the light that hits them to useful electrical power. Researchers have worked for years to create flexible, or “conformal,” organic solar cells that can be wrapped around surfaces, rolled up or even painted onto structures.
Saturday, April 21, 2007
More Fun With The Sun
Science Daily:
Labels:
Solar Power
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment