Innovalight To Double Silicon Ink Efficiency

July 14, 2010

Innovalight boasts that it will be able to double the solar potency of its nanocrystalline silicon ink as soon as next year.

By 2012, additional improvements should push the efficiency of a mainstream crystalline solar cell using the ink to above 20 percent.

Conrad Burke, chief executive of the Sunnyvale, CA, company, said the company’s silicon ink today adds 1 percentage point to the efficiency of a mainstream solar cell. So a cell that is 18 percent efficient jumps to 19 percent.

Next year, the ink will add 2 percentage points to overall efficiency, and in 2012, the target is 3. That should push the 18 percent crystalline cell to 20 percent next year.

The company expects to see this level of efficiency in its labs this year, Burke said at the Intersolar conference in San Francisco.

Such a boost should interest solar cell makers fighting for each tenth of a percentage point gain – and challenge efficiency leader SunPower. SunPower’s cell design is more complex than others and may not easily lend itself to a silicon ink.

Innovalight’s silicon ink is made up of silicon particles 5nm to 10nm in size. It is applied using the screen-printing technology typically used by semiconductor lines during back-end metallization.

When applied to solar cell production, screen-printing becomes a front-end process, and a relatively simple one, says Burke. Pattern alignment is not complicated.

Burke said prices for the printing tool have fallen to about $400,000. For this reason, don’t be surprised to see 20 percent efficient solar cell coming out of China sooner rather than later.

Already, Chinese solar cell maker JA Solar Holdings has latched onto the technology. The company this week announced a three-year contract with Innovalight and said its Secium cells would use the technology.

The cells are in pilot production and have achieved 18.9 percent efficiency.


Columbia University Builds Hybrid Solar Cell

January 5, 2010

Columbia University is not known as a hot bed of clean-tech engineering research.

But the New York institution of higher education boasts it has built a hybrid solar cell that will heat water and produce electricity at the same time.

The technology is designed to be built into roofing rather than mounted on top of a finished building.

Engineering professor Huiming Yin, who was assisted by the structural engineering firm Weidlinger Associates, says the photovoltaic technology is more effective at high temperatures than traditional solar cells. It also is more durable and makes use of thermoelectric generation technology.

Columbia, Weidlinger and Applied Science received a $150,000 Energy Department grant to continue the work.

Columbia University's hybrid solar cell


British Startup Claims Record Efficiency In Simple Solar Cell

July 3, 2009

A spin-off from the Imperial College London claims to have produced the world’s most efficient simple, or single-junction, solar cell.

Cell achieved 28.3 percent efficiency, QuantaSol says

Cell achieved 28.3 percent efficiency, QuantaSol says

QuantaSol of Kingston-upon-Thames said the cell it produced in two years achieves a 28.3 percent efficiency at converting sunlight into electricity.

The “strain-balanced, single-junction, quantum-well” cell was tested by Fraunhofer ISE at greater than 500 suns. A single junction cell enables electrical current to flow in just one direction.

The company was formed in 2007 to commercialize the college’s solar technology. It’s cell makes use of nanostructures of two different alloys that are painted on top of crystalline silicon.

The company, which raised second-round funding last week, plans higher efficiency multi-junction cells in the first quarter of next year.

“This is the first time that anyone has successfully combined high efficiency with ease of manufacture, historically a bug-bear of the solar cell industry,” said CEO Kevin Arthur.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 31 other followers