Aug 19, 2012

Nanotechnology cheapen construction of solar panels


Thanks to progress in the work of nanotechnology, solar panels can now be available to many more families who want to maximize the energy of sunlight to convert it into electrical energy.

Recall that so far have been constructed with silicon solar cells, and are modified with chemicals by what is called a process of doping and generates the driving force necessary to extract energy from them.


Everything indicated that this process could not stand any kind of material, but researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the University of California, have made a remarkable discovery which would enhance the efficiency of photovoltaics by allowing the use of virtually any material semiconductor as metal oxides, sulfides, phosphides, which are abundant and are so much cheaper.

This has been achieved by applying an electric field instead of chemistry. The approach is not new, but until now the existing electrode designs were inconsistent with the photocells.

“Graphene was the inspiration,” explains one of the leaders of the project, Will Regan. Graphene is a highly conductive material, comprising a sheet of carbon with a single atom thick and can be influenced with the game of electric fields. Thus, scientists have described two ways of constructing the electrodes, one with and one graphene itself with very narrow nanowires.

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