Powered Paint: Nanotech Solar Ink

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Powered Paint: Nanotech Solar Ink Brian A. Korgel http://www.che.utexas.edu/korgel-group/ http://www.che.utexas.edu/ngpv/ Department of Chemical Engineering, Texas Materials Institute, Center for Nano- and Molecular Science and Technology The University of Texas at Austin [email protected]

GOAL: Make photovoltaic (PV) electricity a major source of energy

The main problem with photovoltaics for large-scale energy generation is cost

Current cost $2-4/W installed Needed Cost $1/W installed

Ways to Use Power from the Sun • Feed electricity to the grid…large-scale solar farms (largest current market for PVs)

• Off-grid stationary power, i.e., rooftop panels, architectural (still a developing market…the technology is not sufficient)

• Portable power on-demand (not yet a market…need the technology)

Photovoltaic Power Con’s • PV electricity is expensive Convert sunlight compared to conventional directly to electricity energy sources (like coal and natural gas) Sunlight (solar energy) is “free” • “Off-grid” power solutions are very expensive, Sunlight is plentiful cumbersome The technology exists • Portable, light-weight, efficient, low-cost If the technology were photovoltaics are in their better, electricity could be generated from infancy

Pro’s



• • • •

almost anywhere

Silicon dominates the solar cell market It’s relatively expensive and mature Cost is artificially low because of government subsidy

Manufacturing capacity is now higher than demand

Alternatives to Si…

Multijunction III-V solar cells Amorphous silicon CdTe CIGS (Cu(In,Ga)Se2)

Commercially successful

Commercially available

Organic semiconductors Dye-sensitized solar cells Nanocrystal inks

Extremely high efficiency but extremely expensive (only used for aerospace applications)

Commercially available

Under development

Change our mindset…change the way solar cells are made

Why do this now?...New (nano)materials exist that did not 5-10 years ago

Semiconductor fabric Printable inorganic semiconductors

Organic materials-based solar cells (new materials since 1980’s)

Konarka

Roll-to-roll processing of polymer-based solar cells (Mekoprint A/S)

Organic materials generally are not very stable under sunlight for long periods of time…is there a way to combine processing of organics with high performance and stability of inorganics?

Can we make a “solar” paint (inorganic) that can convert sunlight energy into electricity? Solar paint?

100 nm

A Photovoltaic Device How it works:

e-

Photons (Light)

h+

Light absorption creates an electron and hole

A Photovoltaic Device How it works:

e-

Photons (Light)

h+

The electron and hole are separated… requires layers of materials This is the basic design of every solar cell

Concept: process the semiconductor layer by room temperature ink deposition

Metal n-type semiconductor Nanocrystal ink Metal Glass or plastic support

First, we need an ink:

Copper indium galllium selenide: CIGS

First, we need an ink: Develop a chemical synthesis of CIGS nanocrystals

First, we need an ink: N2 TC

CuCl + InCl3 + 2Se

Develop a chemical synthesis of CIGS nanocrystals

oleylamine, 240oC

CuInSe2 nanocrystals

15 – 20 nm diameter CuInSe2 nanocrystals

16

Nanocrystal PV Device Fabrication 1. Deposit metal foil onto a flexible substrate

2. Solution-deposit nanocrystals

4. Pattern metal collection grid

3. Deposit heterojunction partner layers (CdS/ZnO)

Nanocrystal Film Formation For the solar cell, need uniform films of nanocrystals.

• Standard

ZnO

CdS

CuInSe2 nanocrystals Mo Glass

Cell

Efficiency Voc

0.341% 329 mV

Jsc Fill Factor

3.26 mA/cm2 0.318

Nanocrystal Film Formation For the solar cell, need uniform films of nanocrystals.

CIS Nanocrystal PVPCE=3.063% device NP706 s1-p3; Current Density (mA/cm2)

160 140 120 100

Jsc: -16.287 mA/cm2 Voc: 0.412 V FF: 0.456 PCE: 3.063 %

80 60

Efficiency of 3.1%

40 20 0 DARK

-20 -40 -1.5

LIGHT

-1

-0.5

0

0.5

1

1.5

Voltage (V)

V. A. Akhavan, M. G. Panthani, B. W. Goodfellow, D. K. Reid, B. A. Korgel, “Thickness-limited performance of CuInSe2 nanocrystal photovoltaic devices,” Optics Express, 18 (2010) A411-A420.

Efficiency of 2% on plastic

The challenge is to demonstrate commercially viable efficiencies of >10% (currently, the devices function at 3%)

Korgel group milestone chart for CIGS Nanocrystal PVs

3.1%

Project conception (Sept., 2006)

Sprayed CIGS nanocrystal device 6.48% efficiency

March, 2012

New concepts enabled by nanotechnology Low-cost solar cells that can be printed like newspaper and Nanomaterials for bullet-proof vests that can charge your ipod

From the Oxford English Dictionary:

nanowire n. wire, or a wire, that has a thickness or diameter of a few nanometres.

Human Hair Si nanowire

Nanowire FET

Ge nanowire

Paper made of SFLSgrown Si nanowires

10 mm

Silicon nanowire fabric has an extremely high optical density… much less material is needed to absorb the light

CuInSe2 Nanowire Fabric

Proof of concept: CIS Nanowire Photovoltaic

Concept: Photovoltaic Fabric/Textiles • Avoid embedding obtrusive, bulky, heavy solar cells into fabric. • Create semiconductor fabric that is mechanically flexible, lightweight, absorbs sunlight and can be engineered to generate a photovoltaic effect.

Next Generation Thin Film Devices: need high efficiency to get to $1/W

Vision: Enable next generation thin film PVs with >30% efficiency Industry/University Cooperative Research Center on Next Generation Photovoltaics http://www.che.utexas.edu/ngpv/

Change our mindset…change the way solar cells are made

Why do this now?...New (nano)materials exist that did not 5-10 years ago

Semiconductor fabric Printable inorganic semiconductors

Special Acknowledgement to:

1st gen PV students

Vahid Akhavan

Brian Goodfellow

Matt Panthani

Key undergraduate researchers

Danny Hellebusch

Dariya Reid

Next gen PV students Funding from Robert A. Welch Foundation; Air Force Research Laboratory; National Science Foundation

Chet Steinhagen

Jackson Stolle

Taylor Harvey