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Purple Pokeberries Could Unlock Affordable Solar Power Worldwide

Alicia W. Roberts, Wake Forest University
May 11, 2010  |  5 Comments

Pokeberries – the weeds that children smash to stain their cheeks purple-red and that Civil War soldiers used to write letters home – could be the key to spreading solar power across the globe, according to researchers at Wake Forest University's Center for Nanotechnology and Molecular Materials.

Nanotech Center scientists have used the red dye made from pokeberries to coat their efficient and inexpensive fiber-based solar cells. The dye acts as an absorber, helping the cell's tiny fibers trap more sunlight to convert into power.

Pokeberries proliferate even during drought and in rocky, infertile soil. That means residents of rural Africa, for instance, could raise the plants for pennies. Then they could make the dye absorber for the extremely efficient fiber cells and provide energy where power lines don't run, said David Carroll, Ph.D., the center's director.

"They're weeds," Carroll said. "They grow on every continent but Antarctica."

Wake Forest University holds the first patent for fiber-based photovoltaic, or solar, cells, granted by the European Patent Office in November. A spinoff company called FiberCell Inc. has received the license to develop manufacturing methods for the new solar cell.

The fiber cells can produce as much as twice the power that current flat-cell technology can produce. That's because they are composed of millions of tiny, plastic "cans" that trap light until most of it is absorbed. Since the fibers create much more surface area, the fiber solar cells can collect light at any angle — from the time the sun rises until it sets.

To make the cells, the plastic fibers are stamped onto plastic sheets, with the same technology used to attach the tops of soft-drink cans. The absorber — either a polymer or a less-expensive dye — is sprayed on. The plastic makes the cells lightweight and flexible, so a manufacturer could roll them up and ship them cheaply to developing countries — to power a medical clinic, for instance.

Once the primary manufacturer ships the cells, workers at local plants would spray them with the dye and prepare them for installation. Carroll estimates it would cost about $5 million to set up a finishing plant — about $15 million less than it could cost to set up a similar plant for flat cells.

"We could provide the substrate," he said. "If Africa grows the pokeberries, they could take it home.

"It's a low-cost solar cell that can be made to work with local, low-cost agricultural crops like pokeberries and with a means of production that emerging economies can afford."

Alicia W. Roberts is a research writer at Wake Forest University.

5 Comments

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Wil Bason
Wil Bason
May 16, 2010
According to Wikipedia, pokeberries are not native to Africa. They would certainly be invasive. Surely there is a local plant that would do.
Diana Prieto
Diana Prieto
May 12, 2010
Excellent discovery, hopefully soon give macro implementation and the best that can be developed around the world. =D
Mary Saunders
Mary Saunders
May 12, 2010
Across the planet, we have a surplus of humans and a deficit of good work for them to do. Monitoring for degradation and re-coating as necessary could work well in low-outside input/output places. Labor for growing poke is non-existent. Many fiber plants are also no-input, short of what falls from the sky. Flat silicon panels get cleaned either by rain or by maintenance people. Nearly everything has some kind of maintenance attached. I am hopeful concerning this work. Piloted elsewhere, maybe it can arrive in appreciable volume in the U.S. some day. I'm ready to pilot.

Eventually a plant source for plastic may be needed, but there are lots of fiber plants which can supply the raw material for plastic as well, and many of these are easy to grow. Some can grow on the same roots year after year, without a need for tilling and replanting.
lee bidgood, jr.
lee bidgood, jr.
May 12, 2010
Dyes have a finite life under bright sunshine. How durable is this pokeberry dye?

Lee
Sam Salamay
Sam Salamay
May 12, 2010
This is a fantastic discovery. It is similar to sweet sorghum (also a weed) to produce ethanol. So now we have the opportunity to grow clean and renewable fuel and electricity generation. It's time to offer all people the opportunity to create their own power and share in its prosperity. Mining will soon make way to growing energy from the sun.

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