Will
they someday power your devices?
University
of Montreal
Will
you ever be able to charge your mobile device, car and even clothing with
flexible solar cells?
Researchers at Aalto University in Finland and Université de Montréal are studying whether the now-experimental technology could someday be mass-produced and commercialized, and some of the issues that have to be resolved, including the environmental impact.
Researchers at Aalto University in Finland and Université de Montréal are studying whether the now-experimental technology could someday be mass-produced and commercialized, and some of the issues that have to be resolved, including the environmental impact.
For
the electronic cells to be viable on an industrial scale, they would have to be
made through roll-to-roll processing -- that is, be churned out on rolls of
flexible plastic or metal foil, the researchers say.
Ink-jet printing would allow precise insertion of the dye and electrolyte components.
Ink-jet printing would allow precise insertion of the dye and electrolyte components.
The
problem of encapsulation
The
encapsulation of a flexible cell also poses a major challenge. If encapsulation
is insufficient, liquid electrolyte could leak out of the cell or impurities
could seep in, considerably reducing the lifetime of the device.
'Flexible
solar cells are usually made on metals or plastics, and both come with perils:
a metal may corrode, and plastics may allow water and other impurities to
permeate," said Dr. Kati Miettunen, a project manager at Aalto's
Department of Bioproducts and Biosystems.
New
innovations will also be needed to join the substrates together, since
conventional techniques such as glass-frit bonding now used in flat-panel
displays and other devices, are unsuitable for flexible cells.
The
lifetime of devices as an issue
"Another
prerequisite for commercialization is making the lifetime of devices adequate
in relation to the energy that is embedded in the fabrication of the decices,
so that the solar cells won't degrade before they have produced more energy
than was used for making them," adds Jaana Vapaavuori, the new assistant
professor of the chemistry department of Université de Montréal.
New
discoveries using biomaterials, or a hybrid material with wood pulp as
substrates for the cells, could pave the way forward, said Miettunen, who is
working with UdeM's department of chemistry in her research. These materials'
natural ability to filter out impurities would work well for solar cells.