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Ponce
15th July 2011, 12:23 PM
New Solar Cells Can Now be Printed on Paper.


It’s not a joke, MIT’s Miles C. Barr, Jill A. Rowehl, Richard R. Lunt, Jingjing Xu, Annie Wang, Christopher M. Boyce, Sung Gap Im, and Vladimir Bulovi? led by Karen K. Gleason are printing photovoltaic cells on regular paper. Moreover, the process as being reported in MIT News, its possible to print on ordinary untreated paper, cloth or plastic as the substrate for building a solar cell array.

The new technology paper is published in the journal Advanced Materials, published online July 8.

The MIT News article opens describing that the sheet of paper looks like any other document that might have just come spitting out of an office printer, with an array of colored rectangles printed over much of its surface. But then a researcher picks it up, clips a couple of wires to one end, and shines a light on the paper. Instantly an LCD clock display at the other end of the wires starts to display the time. Seems to work, and considering the skill sets and innovative atmosphere at MIT its not a great surprise so much as a quite pleasant one. Photovoltaic is still far too expensive for mass adoption, and in the current economy and government situations, PV is a technology that must self wean itself from incentives.

The device is tough, formed from special “inks” deposited on the paper. It can be folded up to slip into a pocket, then unfolded to watch it again generating electricity in the sunlight. It’s a more complex than just printing out a paper. In order to create an array of photovoltaic cells on the paper, five layers of material need to be deposited onto the same sheet of paper in successive passes, using a mask (also made of paper) to form the patterns of cells on the surface. And the process has to take place in a vacuum chamber.


Solar Cells Printed on Paper. Graduate student Miles Barr holds a sheet of paper that has had one of the layers of the solar cell printed on its surface. Image Credit: Patrick Gillooly.

But the basic process is essentially the same as the one used to make the silvery lining in your bag of potato chips: a vapor-deposition process that can be carried out inexpensively on a vast commercial scale. When one considers the total area of metalized bags like potato chips versus photovoltaic panels the idea of the scale becomes clearer.

The MIT production process technique represents a major departure from today’s systems creating most solar cells on heavy solid inflexible substrates encased in glass, that require exposing the substrates to potentially damaging conditions, either in the form of liquids or high temperatures to etch the silicon into the needed shapes.

The new printing process uses vapors, not liquids, and temperatures less than 120 degrees Celsius. While the PC printer metaphor is used, the MIT News article clarifies that masks are used and vapor deposition takes place over five steps. Its not really so much inkjet printing as five round trips through the potato chip bag process making it more complex but still quite simple, low energy and material intensive and astonishingly low cost.

Using thin film PET plastic in lieu of paper as the substrate in printing a solar cell, the now flexible resilient solar cells still functions even when folded up into a paper airplane. Such assaults of folding and unfolding it 1,000 times, yields no significant loss of performance.

The team is hard at getting past function to appreciable efficiencies. Presently the paper-printed solar cells have an efficiency of about 1 percent, but the team believes this can be increased significantly with further fine-tuning of the materials.

Karen Gleason, who is the Alexander and I. Michael Kasser Professor of Chemical Engineering at MIT points out, “Often people talk about deposition on a flexible device — but then they don’t flex it, to actually demonstrate” that it can survive the stress. Beyond folding the MIT team has tried other tests of the device’s robustness. For example, Gleason explains, they took a finished paper solar cell and ran it through a laser printer, printing on top of the photovoltaic surface. That subjects the cell to the high temperature of the toner-fusing step, and demonstrated that it still worked. Test cells the group produced last year still work, demonstrating their long shelf life.

These attributes put a whole new perspective on the photovoltaic cell. Professor of Electrical Engineering Vladimir Bulovi? brings the idea forward. Because of the low weight of the paper or plastic substrate compared to conventional glass or other materials, “We think we can fabricate scalable solar cells that can reach record-high watts-per-kilogram performance. For solar cells with such properties, a number of technological applications open up,” he says. For example, in remote developing-world locations, weight makes a big difference in how many cells could be delivered in a given load.

That’s a major change in perspective.

The MIT team has demonstrated that the paper could be coated with standard lamination materials, to protect it from the elements opening up outdoor use. Plastic laminations aren’t going to last like glass, but say at 7% of the energy production at perhaps 1/1000th the cost of current glass photovoltaic cells, life expectancy isn’t going to have such an important factor in calculations.

“Printing” cells is commercial now at a price advantage to silicon on glass. Research has been working to produce solar cells and other electronic components on paper, but the big stumbling block has been paper’s rough, fibrous surface at a microscopic scale. To counter that, past attempts have relied on coating the paper first with some smooth material. The MIT team uses ordinary, uncoated paper, including printer paper, tissue, tracing paper and even newsprint with the printing still on it. All of these worked just fine. It’s a robust technology.

The MIT work in the early stages will most likely go to applications of shorter life times.

Wall applications, portable devices, and disposable electronics come to mind. As more research covers the problems of environmental exposure, raising the efficiency, optimizing connections and the field of applications will expand. Perhaps someone will
tie the ideas of gathering more of the spectrum together and very low cost photovoltaic solar will become a consumer reality.

It’s getting so a skeptic can look forward to photovoltaic solar in the coming years.

http://oilprice.com/Alternative-Energy/Solar-Energy/New-Solar-Cells-Can-Now-be-Printed-on-Paper.html

Serpo
15th July 2011, 01:23 PM
Great the cheaper the better

mamboni
15th July 2011, 01:26 PM
Nevermind the paper: how much silver does it use?;D

Gaillo
15th July 2011, 02:06 PM
Hey ponce... get to work on improving the process so you can print solar cells on TOILET paper! ;D

Joe King
15th July 2011, 03:06 PM
He'd make a mint selling it to the fed, seeing as how they think they've got rays of Sunshine coming out of their.....well, you know where. lol

Neuro
15th July 2011, 04:21 PM
Hey ponce... get to work on improving the process so you can print solar cells on TOILET paper! ;D

He should be able to print it from his ass! ;D

Dogman
15th July 2011, 04:24 PM
He should be able to print it from his ass! ;D

Some things should never be exposed to the light of day. ;D solar or not.

Ponce
15th July 2011, 04:40 PM
He should be able to print it from his ass! ;D

Neuro? that was not ok.

Serpo
15th July 2011, 04:47 PM
Air Power: New Device Captures Ambient Electromagnetic Energy to Drive Small Electronic Devices

Researchers have discovered a way to capture and harness energy transmitted by such sources as radio and television transmitters, cell phone networks and satellite communications systems. By scavenging this ambient energy from the air around us, the technique could provide a new way to power networks of wireless sensors, microprocessors and communications chips.


Georgia Tech School of Electrical and Computer Engineering professor Manos Tentzeris displays an inkjet-printed rectifying antenna used to convert microwave energy to DC power. This grid was printed on flexible Kapton material and is expected to operate with frequencies as high as 10 gigahertz when complete. (Click image for high-resolution version. Credit: Gary Meek).

“There is a large amount of electromagnetic energy all around us, but nobody has been able to tap into it,” said Manos Tentzeris, a professor in the Georgia Tech School of Electrical and Computer Engineering who is leading the research. “We are using an ultra-wideband antenna that lets us exploit a variety of signals in different frequency ranges, giving us greatly increased power-gathering capability.”

Tentzeris and his team are using inkjet printers to combine sensors, antennas and energy-scavenging capabilities on paper or flexible polymers. The resulting self-powered wireless sensors could be used for chemical, biological, heat and stress sensing for defense and industry; radio-frequency identification (RFID) tagging for manufacturing and shipping, and monitoring tasks in many fields including communications and power usage.

A presentation on this energy-scavenging technology was given July 6 at the IEEE Antennas and Propagation Symposium in Spokane, Wash. The discovery is based on research supported by multiple sponsors, including the National Science Foundation, the Federal Highway Administration and Japan’s New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO).

Communications devices transmit energy in many different frequency ranges, or bands. The team’s scavenging devices can capture this energy, convert it from AC to DC, and then store it in capacitors and batteries. The scavenging technology can take advantage presently of frequencies from FM radio to radar, a range spanning 100 megahertz (MHz) to 15 gigahertz (GHz) or higher.


Georgia Tech School of Electrical and Computer Engineering professor Manos Tentzeris holds a sensor (left) and an ultra-broadband spiral antenna for wearable energy-scavenging applications. Both were printed on paper using inkjet technology. (Click image for high-resolution version. Credit: Gary Meek)

Scavenging experiments utilizing TV bands have already yielded power amounting to hundreds of microwatts, and multi-band systems are expected to generate one milliwatt or more. That amount of power is enough to operate many small electronic devices, including a variety of sensors and microprocessors.

And by combining energy-scavenging technology with super-capacitors and cycled operation, the Georgia Tech team expects to power devices requiring above 50 milliwatts. In this approach, energy builds up in a battery-like supercapacitor and is utilized when the required power level is reached.

The researchers have already successfully operated a temperature sensor using electromagnetic energy captured from a television station that was half a kilometer distant. They are preparing another demonstration in which a microprocessor-based microcontroller would be activated simply by holding it in the air.

Exploiting a range of electromagnetic bands increases the dependability of energy-scavenging devices, explained Tentzeris, who is also a faculty researcher in the Georgia Electronic Design Center at Georgia Tech. If one frequency range fades temporarily due to usage variations, the system can still exploit other frequencies.

The scavenging device could be used by itself or in tandem with other generating technologies. For example, scavenged energy could assist a solar element to charge a battery during the day. At night, when solar cells don’t provide power, scavenged energy would continue to increase the battery charge or would prevent discharging.


Georgia Tech graduate student Rushi Vyas (front) holds a prototype energy-scavenging device, while School of Electrical and Computer Engineering professor Manos Tentzeris displays a miniaturized flexible antenna that was inkjet-printed on paper and could be used for broadband energy scavenging. (Click image for high-resolution version. Credit: Gary Meek)

Utilizing ambient electromagnetic energy could also provide a form of system backup. If a battery or a solar-collector/battery package failed completely, scavenged energy could allow the system to transmit a wireless distress signal while also potentially maintaining critical functionalities.

The researchers are utilizing inkjet technology to print these energy scavenging devices on paper or flexible paper-like polymers – a technique they already using to produce sensors and antennas. The result would be paper-based wireless sensors that are self-powered, low-cost and able to function independently almost anywhere.

To print electrical components and circuits, the Georgia Tech researchers use a standard materials inkjet printer. However, they add what Tentzeris calls “a unique in-house recipe” containing silver nanoparticles and/or other nanoparticles in an emulsion. This approach enables the team to print not only RF components and circuits, but also novel sensing devices based on such nanomaterials as carbon nanotubes.

When Tentzeris and his research group began inkjet printing of antennas in 2006, the paper-based circuits only functioned at frequencies of 100 or 200 MHz, recalled Rushi Vyas, a graduate student who is working with Tentzeris and graduate student Vasileios Lakafosis on several projects.

“We can now print circuits that are capable of functioning at up to 15 GHz — 60 GHz if we print on a polymer,” Vyas said. “So we have seen a frequency operation improvement of two orders of magnitude.”

http://gtresearchnews.gatech.edu/device-captures-ambient-energy/http://gtresearchnews.gatech.edu/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/Energy2.jpg

Dogman
15th July 2011, 04:55 PM
Yep there are buckets of emf energy all around us, in the city's. If in or near a city and you have a chance to play with a spectrum analyzer with a very wide bandwidth. You will see we are bathed in rf energy all of the time. If you can see it on the scope it is passing through you or being adsorbed by your body, from everything from household wiring , radio ,tv , cell, etc, etc.

Ponce
15th July 2011, 05:45 PM
100 yard wire extended and insulated at both end will light a bulb when close to it with no contact.

Gaillo
15th July 2011, 08:15 PM
100 yard wire extended and insulated at both end will light a bulb when close to it with no contact.

What gauge wire? How many conductors? Insulated or non-insulated wire? What wattage bulb? Fluorescent or incandescent? "Insulated" at both ends - how... scotch tape, duct tape, electrical tape, or heavy silicon? Does the wire need to be suspended above the earth, or buried, or one end buried while the other is suspended? Does one electrical contact of the lightbulb need to be grounded? Does the orientation of the bulb with relation to the wire matter? Does the orientation of the wire with relation to the Earth's surface matter?

How about it - will you post the details? Or should I put this down as yet ANOTHER example of unprovable pseudo-scientific brown TP coloring? ;D

Ponce - extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof. Let's see it.