Solar Cells to be Printed Like Newspaper, Painted on Rooftops

August 26, 2009 RSS Feed Print
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By Daniel J. Vargas

Solar cells could soon be produced more cheaply using nanoparticle “inks” that allow them to be printed like newspaper or painted onto the sides of buildings or rooftops to absorb electricity-producing sunlight.

Brian Korgel, a University of Texas at Austin chemical engineer, is hoping to cut costs to one-tenth of their current price by replacing the standard manufacturing process for solar cells—gas-phase deposition in a vacuum chamber, which requires high temperatures and is relatively expensive.

“That’s essentially what’s needed to make solar-cell technology and photovoltaics widely adopted,” Korgel said. “The sun provides a nearly unlimited energy resource, but existing solar energy harvesting technologies are prohibitively expensive and cannot compete with fossil fuels.”

For the past two years, Korgel and his team have been working on this low-cost, nanomaterials solution to photovoltaics—or solar cell—manufacturing. Korgel is collaborating with professors Al Bard and Paul Barbara, both of the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, and Professor Ananth Dodabalapur of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department. They recently showed proof-of-concept in a recent issue of Journal of the American Chemical Society.

The inks could be printed on a roll-to-roll printing process on a plastic substrate or stainless steel. And the prospect of being able to paint the “inks” onto a rooftop or building is not far-fetched.

“You’d have to paint the light-absorbing material and a few other layers as well,” Korgel said. “This is one step in the direction towards paintable solar cells.”

Korgel uses the light-absorbing nanomaterials, which are 10,000 times thinner than a strand of hair, because their microscopic size allows for new physical properties that can help enable higher-efficiency devices.

In 2002, he co-founded a company called Innovalight, based in California, which is producing inks using silicon as the basis. This time, Korgel and his team are using copper indium gallium selenide or CIGS, which is both cheaper and benign in terms of environmental impact.

“CIGS has some potential advantages over silicon,” Korgel said. “It’s a direct band gap semiconductor, which means that you need much less material to make a solar cell, and that’s one of the biggest potential advantages.”

His team has developed solar-cell prototypes with efficiencies at one percent; however, they need to be about 10 percent.

“If we get to 10 percent, then there’s real potential for commercialization,” Korgel said. “If it works, I think you could see it being used in three to five years.”

He also said that the inks, which are semi-transparent, could help realize the prospect of having windows that double as solar cells. Korgel said his work has attracted the interest of industrial partners.

Tags:
science,
renewable energy,
environment,
solar energy

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I am interested to know the progress of this research on sprayable painted solar cells.

Maher 3:33PM September 20, 2011

That's a nice thoughtful post. I hope you're having a great holiday. please continue your kicking of republican talking head/ass on MSNBC. I can't watch fox because I just can't even if you're on it. but I will watch clips. whenever I see you, I think, "she's ours". Recommend a solar water heater production sites: http://www.ejaisolar.com/

brian of NE 4:37AM November 16, 2010

“You’d have to paint the light-absorbing material and a few other layers as well,” Korgel said. “This is one step in the direction towards paintable solar cells.”

What a misleading statement! How many other layers? You mean a conductive back contact, a window material, a highly conductive transparent front contact and an encapsulating layer? All of the above pinhole free and well controlled thickness? And to function efficient for tens of years? Even shingles degrade in a few years! Film solar technology is difficult and to convey to the public the message that one day we will paint on walls and roofs our energy sources trivializes one of the most challenging objectives of our times. And NSF stands behind such statements.

Nick

Nick of NY 4:38AM August 31, 2009

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