Flexible, light solar cells could provide new opportunities
By By David L. Chandler, MIT News Office | 03 Jan 2013
MIT researchers have produced a new kind of photovoltaic cell based on sheets of flexible graphene coated with a layer of nanowires. The approach could lead to low-cost, transparent and flexible solar cells that could be deployed on windows, roofs or other surfaces.
The new approach is detailed in a report published in the journal Nano Letters, co-authored by MIT post-docs Hyesung Park and Sehoon Chang, associate professor of materials science and engineering Silvija Gradecak, and eight other MIT researchers.
While most of today's solar cells are made of silicon, these remain expensive because the silicon is generally highly purified and then made into crystals that are sliced thin. Many researchers are exploring alternatives, such as nanostructured or hybrid solar cells; indium tin oxide (ITO) is used as a transparent electrode in these new solar cells.
''Currently, ITO is the material of choice for transparent electrodes,'' Gradecak says, such as in the touch screens now used on smartphones. But the indium used in that compound is expensive, while graphene is made from ubiquitous carbon.
The new material, Gradecak says, may be an alternative to ITO. In addition to its lower cost, it provides other advantages, including flexibility, low weight, mechanical strength and chemical robustness.
Building semiconducting nanostructures directly on a pristine graphene surface without impairing its electrical and structural properties has been challenging due to graphene's stable and inert structure, Gradecak explains.