Pictured above are polymer donors and fullerene acceptors.
Credit: Courtesy of UCLA Chemistry
The materials in most of today's residential
rooftop solar panels can store energy from the sun for only a few
microseconds at a time. A new technology developed by chemists at UCLA
is capable of storing solar energy for up to several weeks -- an advance
that could change the way scientists think about designing solar cells.
The findings are published June 19 in the journal Science.
The new design is inspired by the way that plants generate energy through photosynthesis.
'Biology does a very good job of creating energy from sunlight,' said
Sarah Tolbert, a UCLA professor of chemistry and one of the senior
authors of the research. 'Plants do this through photosynthesis with
extremely high efficiency.'
'In photosynthesis, plants that are exposed to sunlight use carefully
organized nanoscale structures within their cells to rapidly separate
charges -- pulling electrons away from the positively charged molecule
that is left behind, and keeping positive and negative charges
separated,' Tolbert said. 'That separation is the key to making the
process so efficient.'
To capture energy from sunlight, conventional rooftop solar cells use
silicon, a fairly expensive material. There is currently a big push to
make lower-cost solar cells using plastics, rather than silicon, but
today's plastic solar cells are relatively inefficient, in large part
because the separated positive and negative electric charges often
recombine before they can become electrical energy.
'Modern plastic solar cells don't have well-defined structures like
plants do because we never knew how to make them before,' Tolbert said.
'But this new system pulls charges apart and keeps them separated for
days, or even weeks. Once you make the right structure, you can vastly
improve the retention of energy.'
The two components that make the UCLA-developed system work are a
polymer donor and a nano-scale fullerene acceptor. The polymer donor
absorbs sunlight and passes electrons to the fullerene acceptor; the
process generates electrical energy.
The plastic materials, called organic photovoltaics, are typically
organized like a plate of cooked pasta -- a disorganized mass of long,
skinny polymer 'spaghetti' with random fullerene 'meatballs.' But this
arrangement makes it difficult to get current out of the cell because
the electrons sometimes hop back to the polymer spaghetti and are lost.
The UCLA technology arranges the elements more neatly -- like small
bundles of uncooked spaghetti with precisely placed meatballs. Some
fullerene meatballs are designed to sit inside the spaghetti bundles,
but others are forced to stay on the outside. The fullerenes inside the
structure take electrons from the polymers and toss them to the outside
fullerene, which can effectively keep the electrons away from the
polymer for weeks.
'When the charges never come back together, the system works far
better,' said Benjamin Schwartz, a UCLA professor of chemistry and
another senior co-author. 'This is the first time this has been shown
using modern synthetic organic photovoltaic materials.'
In the new system, the materials self-assemble just by being placed in close proximity.
'We worked really hard to design something so we don't have to work very hard,' Tolbert said.
The new design is also more environmentally friendly than current
technology, because the materials can assemble in water instead of more
toxic organic solutions that are widely used today.
'Once you make the materials, you can dump them into water and they
assemble into the appropriate structure because of the way the materials
are designed,' Schwartz said. 'So there's no additional work.'
The researchers are already working on how to incorporate the technology into actual solar cells.
Yves Rubin, a UCLA professor of chemistry and another senior
co-author of the study, led the team that created the uniquely designed
molecules. 'We don't have these materials in a real device yet; this is
all in solution,' he said. 'When we can put them together and make a
closed circuit, then we will really be somewhere.'
For now, though, the UCLA research has proven that inexpensive
photovoltaic materials can be organized in a way that greatly improves
their ability to retain energy from sunlight.
Tolbert and Schwartz also are members of UCLA's California
NanoSystems Institute. The study's other co-lead authors were UCLA
graduate students Rachel Huber and Amy Ferreira. UCLA's Electron Imaging
Center for NanoMachines imaged the assembled structure in a lab led by
Hong Zhou.
The research was supported by the National Science Foundation (grant
CHE-1112569) and by the Center for Molecularly Engineered Energy
Materials, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S.
Department of Energy (DE-AC06-76RLO-1830). Ferreira received support
from the Clean Green IGERT (grant DGE-0903720).
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
University of California - Los Angeles. The original item was written by Melody Pupols.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.