UCLA Researchers Develop Highly Transparent Solar Cells

27 Jul, 2012

via UCLA Newsroom

Transparent Solar CellsUCLA researchers have devel­oped a new trans­par­ent solar cell that is an advance toward giv­ing win­dows in homes and other build­ings the abil­ity to gen­er­ate elec­tric­ity while still allow­ing peo­ple to see out­side. Their study appears in the jour­nal ACS Nano.

The UCLA team describes a new kind of poly­mer solar cell (PSC) that pro­duces energy by absorb­ing mainly infrared light, not vis­i­ble light, mak­ing the cells nearly 70% trans­par­ent to the human eye. They made the device from a pho­toac­tive plas­tic that con­verts infrared light into an elec­tri­cal current.

“These results open the poten­tial for vis­i­bly trans­par­ent poly­mer solar cells as add-on com­po­nents of portable elec­tron­ics, smart win­dows and building-integrated pho­to­voltaics and in other appli­ca­tions,” said study leader Yang Yang, a UCLA pro­fes­sor of mate­ri­als sci­ence and engi­neer­ing, who also is direc­tor of the Nano Renewable Energy Center at California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI).

Yang, who is also the holder of the Carol and Lawrence E. Tannas, Jr., Endowed Chair in Engineering, added that there has been intense world-wide inter­est in so-called poly­mer solar cells. “Our new PSCs are made from plastic-like mate­ri­als and are light­weight and flex­i­ble,” he said. “More impor­tantly, they can be pro­duced in high vol­ume at low cost.”

Polymer solar cells have attracted great atten­tion due to their advan­tages over com­pet­ing solar cell tech­nolo­gies. Scientists have also been intensely inves­ti­gat­ing PSCs for their poten­tial in mak­ing unique advances for broader appli­ca­tions. Several such appli­ca­tions would be enabled by high-performance vis­i­bly trans­par­ent pho­to­voltaic (PV) devices, includ­ing building-integrated pho­to­voltaics and inte­grated PV charg­ers for portable electronics.

Previously, many attempts have been made toward demon­strat­ing vis­i­bly trans­par­ent or semi­trans­par­ent PSCs. However, these demon­stra­tions often result in low vis­i­ble light trans­parency and/or low device effi­ciency because suit­able poly­meric PV mate­ri­als and effi­cient trans­par­ent con­duc­tors were not well deployed in device design and fabrication.

A team of UCLA researchers from the California NanoSystems Institute, the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science and UCLA’s Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry have demon­strated high-performance, solution-processed, vis­i­bly trans­par­ent poly­mer solar cells through the incor­po­ra­tion of near-infrared light-sensitive poly­mer and using sil­ver nanowire com­pos­ite films as the top trans­par­ent elec­trode. The near-infrared pho­toac­tive poly­mer absorbs more near-infrared light but is less sen­si­tive to vis­i­ble light, bal­anc­ing solar cell per­for­mance and trans­parency in the vis­i­ble wave­length region.Another break­through is the trans­par­ent con­duc­tor made of a mix­ture of sil­ver nanowire and tita­nium diox­ide nanopar­ti­cles, which was able to replace the opaque metal elec­trode used in the past. This com­pos­ite elec­trode also allows the solar cells to be fab­ri­cated eco­nom­i­cally by solu­tion pro­cess­ing. With this com­bi­na­tion, 4% power-conversion effi­ciency for solution-processed and vis­i­bly trans­par­ent poly­mer solar cells has been achieved.

“We are excited by this new inven­tion on trans­par­ent solar cells, which applied our recent advances in trans­par­ent con­duct­ing win­dows (also pub­lished in ACS Nano) to fab­ri­cate these devices,” said Paul S.Weiss, CNSI direc­tor and Fred Kavli Chair in NanoSystems Sciences.

Source: UCLA Newsroom

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