Technology News
Zinc dyes point way to renewable photovoltaic devices
May 03, 2012 | Paul Buckley | 222904536
The research team has developed a new strategy for making and attaching colored materials to the surface of titanium dioxide nanoparticles and have also shown for the first time that simple compounds of the readily available metal zinc may be used.
Dye-sensitized solar cells (DSCs) consist of a semiconductor, titanium dioxide, which is coated with a colored dye. The dye absorbs sunlight and injects an electron into the semiconductor. This is the primary event leading to the photocurrent.Project Officer Dr Biljana Bozic for University of Basel’s research group said that the key discovery was finding a method for the simultaneous synthesis of the dye and its attachment to the semiconductor surface. Researchers Nik Hostettler and Ewald Schoenhofer in the group of Professors Ed Constable and Catherine Housecroft from the University of Basel.
“The discovery that zinc dyes can be used is most unexpected,” explained Professor Constable because most chemists consider zinc to be a ‘boring’ element, as most of its compounds are colourless. However, in course of other work related to next-generation lighting devices, the research team including Nik Hostettler and Ewald Schoenhofer were led by Professors Ed Constable and Catherine Housecroft discovered new highly-colored organic compounds that could bind to zinc to give new coloured materials. Although the devices are not yet particularly efficient, the observation opens the way to new generations of DSCs with hitherto unconsidered types of dyes.
Conventional DSCs use ruthenium dyes, but ruthenium is very rare and expensive (3,500 Swiss Francs/2,990 Euro per kilogram). Recently, the research team demonstrated that dyes from abundant and relatively inexpensive copper (7.5 Swiss Francs/6.3 Euro per kilogram) were effective in DSCs and the extension to cheap zinc (1.8 Swiss Francs/1.5 Euro per kilogram) compounds further increases the sustainability of the materials science.
"This is a significant step towards our dream of coupling photovoltaics and lighting in an intelligent curtain which can store solar energy during the day and function as a lighting device at night. This is at the core of our ERC research programme Light-In, Light-Out," commented Constable.
More information about the research is published in Chemical Communications
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c2cc31729j
Please login to post your comment - click here
Related News
- Solar industry capital spending hits seven-year low in 2013 but upturn is on the cards
- EU antidumping duties could block Chinese modules out of the European Market
- Gallium nitride delivers 97.5 percent efficiency in PFC-corrected supply
- Identifying the best power supply for your test application
- Solar PV wafer production to grow 19 percent in 2013, forecasts NPD Solarbuzz
- Large-scale grid integration of variable photovoltaic power offers new possibilities
- Mouser signs global distribution deal with ADI
- Top 20 Solar PV module suppliers capture 70 percent market share in first quarter of 2013 reports NPD Solarbuzz
- Silica starts roll out of design support strategy focused on power applications
- Long-life portable tracker packs world-leading programmable tracking software into credit card-sized footprint
MOST POPULAR NEWS
- Volvo evaluates flywheel hybrid drive - fuel savings of up to 25%
- PV storage market is set to grow to USD19bn by 2017
- Accutronics offers new custom battery service
- Nordic Semiconductor releases world's smallest Bluetooth low energy and ANT+ ICs
- Ultra-low-power SoC supports world's smallest Bluetooth location stickers
- Power-One enters into patent license agreement with Microchip
- Quad-MOSFET solution boosts efficiency and eliminates heat sinking in active bridge applications
- Market for GaN and SiC power semiconductors set to rise by factor of 18 in next decade
- Solar industry capital spending hits seven-year low in 2013 but upturn is on the cards
- Advanced microcontroller combines floating point and low leakage technology to achieve longest battery lifetime in portable applications
Interview
Technical papers
- Dangers of Aftermarket Counterfeit Battery Packs
- High Voltage Surge Stoppers Ensure Reliable Operation During Power Surges
- Motor-Drive Design made Simple
- Adaptive Cell Converter Topology Enables Constant Efficiency in PFC Applications
- Micropower Isolated Flyback Converter with Input Voltage Range from 6V to 100V
- Derating of Schottky Diodes
- Heatsink Optimization
- High Performance ZVS Buck Regulator Removes Barriers To Increased Power Throughput
- Waste heat replaces batteries
- Stepper Motor Control IC
Poll
UPS
Diodes
Fairchild Semiconductor
Battery
Linear Technology
Power Supply
Microcontroller
International Rectifier
Analog
Power Supplies
STMicroelectronics
Photovoltaic
Power Management
MOSFET
Microcontrollers
Solar
Maxim Integrated Products
Texas Instruments
Power
MOSFETs
GaN
NXP Semiconductors
Batteries
Energy Harvesting
Analog Devices
Vishay Intertechnology
Smart Grid
Intersil
National Semiconductor
IMS Research
All material on this site Copyright © 2009 - 2010 European Business Press SA. All rights reserved.
This site contains articles under license from EETimes Group , a division of United Business Media LLC.
This site contains articles under license from EETimes Group , a division of United Business Media LLC.


