Major switch for solar energy: Researchers
investigate use of carbon-based materials to produce cheaper energy
Nov 27 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Larry Rulison Albany Times Union,
N.Y.
In a small physics lab on the uptown campus of the University at Albany,
researchers are trying to develop a new type of solar-electric cell that
will be cheaper -- and more flexible -- than a traditional solar cell made
from silicon.
About 90 percent of solar cells are made from silicon. But there's a mad
dash to make the cells from organic material to reduce the cost and foster
wider acceptance of the technology.
The organic solar cells are made of alternatives to silicon such as polymers
or plastics.
Solar, or photovoltaic, cells produce an electric current when exposed to
light.
Organic materials are those derived from carbon, which is the building block
of life. Silicon, made from sand, is the same semiconducting material that
is used to make computer chips.
Silicon solar cells cost from $3 to $3.50 for each watt of electrical output
they produce. Achieving the same electrical output costs just 40 cents using
organic material.
"That's why there is the interest in organics," said Pradeep Haldar, a
professor at UAlbany's College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering and
director of the school's Energy and Environmental Technology Applications
Center.
Haldar said his work on organic solar cells is being funded by NASA, which
is seeking ways to make flexible solar cells that can be unfolded in space.
He believes organic solar cells won't replace silicon solar cells, but as
the technology is perfected, the former will serve in niche applications
such as powering computers for the military in the field or for putting
solar cells on clothing or tents.
Haldar isn't the only one in the Capital Region searching for a better way
to make solar cells. DayStar Technologies Inc. in Halfmoon is working to
develop so-called "thin-film" cells made from a mixture of copper, indium,
gallium and diselenide that are flexible like organic cells, but more
expensive. It takes $2 worth of material to produce each watt of electrical
output.
The downside of organic solar cells is their relative inefficiency.
Polymer-based solar cells have an efficiency of less than 5 percent, while
solar cells using single-crystalline silicon have an efficiency of nearly 25
percent. That means the polymer cells must cover an area five times the size
of solar cells to produce the same amount of energy.
Organic solar cells also don't last as long as traditional solar cells.
"If you expose it to air, it degrades," Haldar said. "That's one of the
biggest problems."
Haldar and his team of scientists are working to improve the longevity of
organic solar cells by adding copper nanorods to the devices.
Another upstate New York researcher working on organic solar cells is George
Malliaras, an associate professor in materials science and engineering at
Cornell University in Ithaca who also is director of the school's nanoscale
facility.
Malliaras says organic solar cells can be a lot cheaper than silicon solar
cells because of the way they can be manufactured, in a roll-to-roll process
similar to how a newspaper press works.
"That can bring down the cost substantially," Malliaras said Monday. "If you
can produce electronics the same way you produce a newspaper, the costs will
plummet."
Malliaras also is working on a new process that makes organic solar cells
using a spray-on technique for applying the components of the cell. Larry
Rulison can be reached at 454-5504 or by e-mail at lrulison@timesunion.com. |