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The energy from sunlight falling on only 9 percent of California’s
Mojave Desert could power all of the United States’ electricity needs if
the energy could be efficiently harvested, according to some estimates.
Unfortunately, current-generation solar cell technologies are too
expensive and inefficient for wide-scale commercial applications.
A team of Northwestern University researchers has developed a new anode
coating strategy that significantly enhances the efficiency of solar
energy power conversion. A paper about the work, which focuses on
“engineering” organic material-electrode interfaces in bulk-heterojunction
organic solar cells, is published online this week in the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
This breakthrough in solar energy conversion promises to bring
researchers and developers worldwide closer to the goal of producing
cheaper, more manufacturable and more easily implemented solar cells. Such
technology would greatly reduce our dependence on burning fossil fuels for
electricity production as well as reduce the combustion product: carbon
dioxide, a global warming greenhouse gas.
Tobin J. Marks, the Vladimir N. Ipatieff Research Professor in
Chemistry in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences and professor of
materials science and engineering, and Robert Chang, professor of
materials science and engineering in the McCormick School of Engineering
and Applied Science, led the research team. Other Northwestern team
members were researcher Bruce Buchholz and graduate students Michael D.
Irwin and Alexander W. Hains.
Of the new solar energy conversion technologies on the horizon, solar
cells fabricated from plastic-like organic materials are attractive
because they could be printed cheaply and quickly by a process similar to
printing a newspaper (roll-to-roll processing).
To date, the most successful type of plastic photovoltaic cell is
called a “bulk-heterojunction cell.” This cell utilizes a layer consisting
of a mixture of a semiconducting polymer (an electron donor) and a
fullerene (an electron acceptor) sandwiched between two electrodes -- one
a transparent electrically conducting electrode (the anode, which is
usually a tin-doped indium oxide) and a metal (the cathode), such as
aluminum.
When light enters through the transparent conducting electrode and
strikes the light-absorbing polymer layer, electricity flows due to
formation of pairs of electrons and holes that separate and move to the
cathode and anode, respectively. These moving charges are the electrical
current (photocurrent) generated by the cell and are collected by the two
electrodes, assuming that each type of charge can readily traverse the
interface between the polymer-fullerene active layer and the correct
electrode to carry away the charge -- a significant challenge.
The Northwestern researchers employed a laser deposition technique that
coats the anode with a very thin (5 to 10 nanometers thick) and smooth
layer of nickel oxide. This material is an excellent conductor for
extracting holes from the irradiated cell but, equally important, is an
efficient “blocker” which prevents misdirected electrons from straying to
the “wrong” electrode (the anode), which would compromise the cell energy
conversion efficiency.
In contrast to earlier approaches for anode coating, the Northwestern
nickel oxide coating is cheap, electrically homogeneous and non-corrosive.
In the case of model bulk-heterojunction cells, the Northwestern team has
increased the cell voltage by approximately 40 percent and the power
conversion efficiency from approximately 3 to 4 percent to 5.2 to 5.6
percent.
The researchers currently are working on further tuning the anode
coating technique for increased hole extraction and electron blocking
efficiency and moving to production-scaling experiments on flexible
substrates.
The PNAS paper is titled “p-Type Semiconducting Nickel Oxide as an
Efficiency-enhancing Anode Interfacial Layer in Polymer Bulk-heterojunction
Solar Cells.”
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