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If you
think solar is still too expensive, here’s how to get more bang for your
solar-cell buck.
Take a
small solar cell, and slice it into thin slivers. Wrap the slivers around the
edges of a slab of glass. Paint the glass with a high-tech, but cheap, dye —
which you bought online — and voilà! You have a new solar panel. It can collect
much more energy than the pricey cell you started with, and it costs only a
little more.
If done
right, making solar panels with a new generation of dyes complementing
conventional photovoltaic cells would be cheaper and thus more competitive with
other energy sources, Marc Baldo of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
and his colleagues report in the July 11 Science.
Already in the team’s lab demonstration, “it gives a tenfold increase in total
power per unit area of conventional photovoltaic,” Baldo says.
The team’s
results show that the technology can potentially reduce the cost of solar
panels, comments Sean Shaheen of the
The most
efficient solar cells are made from crystals of a semiconductor such as
silicon. Once installed, solar cells give out energy for free. But silicon
crystals are expensive to produce, so solar cells can take decades to pay for
themselves.
One strategy
to deal with this issue follows from the fact that solar cells become more
efficient when concentrated light shines on them. Engineers are experimenting
with parabolic mirrors to reflect light onto small, high-power cells. But to
work well, such mirrors must point at the sun all the time, so they need
sophisticated tracking mechanisms that keep turning them throughout the day.
Baldo and
his colleagues looked to dyes for a simpler approach: They gather light with
dye on a glass surface and then concentrate it on the much smaller surface area
of the glass’s edges. The dye, painted on the glass, absorbs sunlight and then
gives it back via fluorescence. Photons come out of dye molecules in random
directions, with some 80 percent shooting out horizontally or bouncing off the
inner surface of the glass at an angle. That way, the glass keeps the photons
from escaping, and guides them to its edges. There, slivers of conventional
photovoltaic cells — placed vertically, rather than facing direct sunlight —
gobble the photons up.
This
concept was first proposed in the 1970s, but early attempts were disappointing.
The dyes themselves were absorbing too much of the light, making the panels
inefficient.
To prevent
that, Baldo’s team mixed 1 percent of a phosphorescent dye with the fluorescent
dye. The fluorescent dye absorbs photons of a specific energy. Each time a photon hits fluorescent dye molecule, the molecule swells with energy. Normally, the dye would
then emit a new photon and its energy return to normal. Since the second photon
has the same energy as the first, chances are it would soon be absorbed again
by another dye molecule. (Just as dye molecules absorb photons coming from the
sun, the dye molecules can absorb photons emitted by each other.) But ideally, to
achieve greater efficiency, scientists would like the photon to be absorbed,
released and then head straight to the photovoltaic panel to be turned into
electricity.
But in the
new design, each fluorescent molecule will be neighbored (usually less than 1
nanometer away) by a molecule of the second dye, which will sense the energetic
swelling of a fluorescent molecule, and steal away its extra energy. The second
dye molecule will also soon emit a photon, but of a lower energy. That “wrong”
energy will enable most of the photons to fly by the fluorescent molecules
without being re-absorbed.
Working
with off-the-shelf materials, the MIT team was able to get 6.8 percent
efficiency out of their panels — meaning to convert 6.8 percent of solar energy
into electricity — but Baldo says developing new, specialized dyes for the
purpose could probably double that figure. Dyes tend to absorb photons within a
narrow range of wavelengths, but glass layers could be stacked, each containing
a dye that picks up a different wavelength. Many experts say that low-cost
panels should be at least 10 percent efficient to compete with standard
photovoltaics, which can have efficiencies of more than 20 percent.
By
circumventing self-absorption, the team has overcome “what seemed like a fundamental
problem,” says
Peumans
says researchers will still have some work to do, and that making the
technology competitive may also require developing specialized photovoltaics
for the different layers, which would pick up photons of particular
wavelengths. “People will pay attention again and look back at their cabinets,
and the dyes they already have,” Peumans says.
Found in: Materials Science, Matter & Energy, Molecules and Technology
- Castelvecchi, D. 2007. Double-decker solar cell. Science News 172 (July 18):
- Cunningham, A. 2007. Reaching for rays. Science News 171 (May 26):
- Goho, A. 2005. Infrared Vision: New material may enhance plastic solar cells. Science News 167 (Jan 19):
- Goho, A. 2004. Protein Power: Solar cell produces electricity from spinach and bacterial proteins. Science News 165 (June 2):
- Currie, M. J., J. K. Mapel, T. D. Heidel, S. Goffri, and M. A. Baldo 2008. High-Efficiency Organic Solar Concentrators for Photovoltaics. Science 321 (July 11): 226.
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