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New, flexible solar cells just 1 micrometer thick
by Brooks Hays
Gwangju, South Korea (UPI) Jun 20, 2016


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Researchers in South Korea have developed solar cells, or photovoltaics, so flexible and thin they they can be wrapped around a pencil. Scientists say they could power the next generation of wearable electronics.

Thinness is the key to the new solar cells' flexibility. The thinner a material, the more flexible it usually is.

"Our photovoltaic is about 1 micrometer thick," Jongho Lee, an engineer at the Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology in South Korea, said in a news release.

Most photovoltaic cells are several hundred times thicker, and even the thinnest solar cells are two to four times thicker than those developed by Lee and his colleagues.

Engineers built the solar cell using a production technique called "cold welding." First cells were stamped onto a flexible substrate layered with an electrode. When scientists applied intense pressure at a relatively high temperature -- 170 degrees Celsius -- a top layer on the substrate called the photoresist melted and became a temporary adhesive, affixing the cells to the electrode substrate. The photoresist was later peeled away, leaving a metal-to-metal bond.

The substrate's bottom metal layer helps reflect solar rays back toward the photovoltaic cells.

"The thinner cells are less fragile under bending, but perform similarly or even slightly better," Lee said.

While scientists have made similarly thin solar cells, researchers say their new technique -- detailed in the journal Applied Physics Letters -- is simpler and uses fewer materials, making it better suited for scaled production.


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Bristol, UK (SPX) Jun 19, 2016
Researchers from the Universities of Bristol and Exeter are one step closer to developing a new generation of low-cost, high-efficiency solar cells. The structure is one of the world's first examples of a tri-layer metasurface absorber using a carbon interlayer. The system, developed by Chenglong Wang a PhD student in Professor Martin Cryan's research group, uses amorphous carbon as an int ... read more


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