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Organic Photovoltaics: the Good, the Bad, and the Inefficient

By Joe Kwiatkowski, Physicist, Imperial College London
May 19, 2008   |   10 Comments

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10 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 10
May 21, 2008
Thanks.Very informative and rased my hopes on this subject....hopefully in very near future...
Comment
2 of 10
May 21, 2008
Thanks for the information. I agree commercial application is not far away.
I live in "The Valley of The Sun" and we need more Solar here.
Arizona State University has started to work on this.
Comment
3 of 10
May 21, 2008
A good article for the layman. Perhaps the dominant sentence is "molecules are fickle entities that will react with other molecules such as oxygen and water." It is not directly stated that these molecules consist of multiple low-energy bonds that are easily disrupted by light and the disruption can be permanent. Silicon in a crystal has bands and the band that is capable of being "excited" has a large energy gap relative to those weak bonds in organic materials. Large sputtering systems for "spraying" silicon that can be treated to form controllable "polycrystalline silicon" is an approach with an intermediate expense and an intermediate efficiency. These layers can also be very thin. The problem has been manufacturing yield.
Comment
4 of 10
May 21, 2008
It seems that it might be better, in hot climates, to collect the heat and turn it into electricity. I am thinking Stirling engines and other new technologies such as Eneco's chip. Water, antifreeze, and liquid salt can be mediums and storage.
Comment
5 of 10
May 21, 2008
ETFE is used as a top layer for thin film PV. Teflon is used as the bottom insulator for silicon cells. I am sure such fluoropolymers will serve to protect organic PV from the environment as well. One issue: ETFE transmits UV-A and UV-B light (but not UV-C) which might do harm to some of the organic molecules.
Comment
6 of 10
Of course, ETFE & PTFE (and many other commonly used poymers) are electrical insulators. They have very few unsaturated (multiple or conjugated multiple) bonds -- typically one bond in a thousand to one in a million is a double bond.

Would their conducting "cousins" (if any exist or may be engineered) also share their excellent resistance against degradation by light & heat?
Comment
7 of 10
An excellent introduction to the topic.

I have successfully used some polymer materials in large solar pool and aquaculture heating systems. The first, constructed in 1979, was recently still in operation.

A question to Joe Kwiatkowski:-- Would fluoropolymers (such as super-clear ETFE film, of which the transparent roofs of many buildings -- including the Bank of England & the Olympic Swimming stadium in Beijing -- are made) be suitable for photovoltaics?

They have excellent long term resistance against degradation by light -- including UV. Also to degradation by temperatures up to & well beyond 100°C.
Comment
8 of 10
Excellent.
If making an organic solar cell is going to be as easy as printing a newspaper we can plan to change solar cells every morning like we do with true newspapers. That way doesn't matter if the organic solar cells are quickly degraded by the light or by the oxygen; they don't need to "survive" more than one day.
Can we have something lasting one week? A weekly duty is more attactive than a daily one. Better if we can reactivate the solar panel every week with a simple passage of sugar or silicone spray. Thay way we lower the burden of recycling.
I'm not kidding. Just to say that the technology seems to me to be promising.
Comment
9 of 10
June 20, 2008
I worked for BP Research on photovolatics over 20 years ago. Hearing that a new dawn is imminent makes me feel very nostalgic.
Producing photovoltaic structures using low energy processes which don't when exposed to sunlight, rain etc. is really, really tough.
The key parameter is the energy pay-back time - how long before you generate more energy than you invested in the manufacture.
Comment
10 of 10
February 5, 2009
I live in Brazil and I think this new technology will be promise for isolated and poor communities. I agree with Roberto Petracca, if the organic materials tend to degrade in the light, ironically, by other side it is cheap and could be easy to change.
Developing countries need public policies promoting incentives in order to faster the development of this new technologies.
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