New design to boost ability of low-cost solar panels

New design to boost ability of low-cost solar panels
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A new design can make low cost solar panels more efficient by enhancing their ability to collect the sun\'s energy and release it as electricity, shows research. Scientists have assembled the components of the panels in such a way that they resemble the natural systems the plants use to tap the sun\'s energy.

New York: A new design can make low cost solar panels more efficient by enhancing their ability to collect the sun's energy and release it as electricity, shows research. Scientists have assembled the components of the panels in such a way that they resemble the natural systems the plants use to tap the sun's energy.


This way, they could separate positive and negative charges in a stable way for up to many weeks compared to millionths of a second that the current method can separate the positive and the negative charges. The team's X-ray studies enabled them to see, at a microscopic level, which material design has the most ideal structure at the nanoscale for promoting this charge separation.


The results were outlined in Science. To capture energy from sunlight, conventional rooftop solar cells use silicon, which can be expensive. The new system is composed of strands of a polymer that absorb sunlight and pass electrons to a fullerene, a spherical carbon molecule also known as a "buckyball". The new design is also more eco-friendly compared to the current technology, as the materials can assemble in water instead of more toxic organic solutions that are typically used.

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