Korean doors inspire new energy converter: EES article featured in Chemistry World

In a setup resembling traditional Korean doors, scientists from Korea have made dye-sensitised solar cells (DSCs) that are bendy enough to be rolled around a pen and twisted, while maintaining their energy conversion efficiency at 90% of that of the flat form. Bendable DSCs have potential applications in commercial advertising and small portable power sources.  

Current DSCs are built up of layers in a sandwich-type structure. They consist of two expensive transparent conductive oxide (TCO)-coated substrates with a spacer inserted between them to provide space for an electrolyte. Unfortunately, they are not very flexible because bending causes a strain on the two electrodes as they are bent in opposite directions – one substrate is under compressive strain and the other is under tensile strain. This causes the substrates to detach from the spacer. 

Korean doors

The dye-sensitised solar cell is highly bendable because of its structure - based on traditional Korean doors. © Shutterstock

 

To circumvent this problem, Seung Cha and his team from the Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute, Boolmosangil, have bonded all the DSC components to glass paper, forming a structure similar to Korean doors. ‘The traditional Korean door is a beautiful and interesting internal door that consists of a wooden frame and traditional paper called “Hanji”,’ says Cha. ‘Hanji is very strong and can keep out the wind. At the same time, some light can penetrate the Hanji, creating good mood lighting in a living room.’  

First, the team attached a stainless steel mesh to one side of a sheet of glass paper. ‘The metal mesh acts as the wooden frame and the glass paper acts as the Hanji,’ explains Cha. Then, they deposited platinum – the electrochemical catalyst and conductor – on the other side. They deposited a TiO2 photoelectrode onto the mesh and filled the pores in the glass paper with the electrolyte. ‘The structure is flexible, and expensive and fragile TCO films are not required,’ says Cha. 

Tests on the team’s DSC showed that it had an energy conversion efficiency of 2%. Cha admits that the 2% efficiency is not high compared to current DSC systems and that an efficiency of 5% is needed for commercial applications. DSCs with glass substrates have shown efficiencies of more than 10% and flexible DSCs using TCO film coated plastic substrates have efficiencies of more than 5%. ‘However, our structured cell can be rolled around a pen and this degree of flexibility has not reported before,’ he says.    

Cha’s team is working towards increasing the efficiency and he expects that they can achieve 4-5% efficiency with their concept in time.  

‘As the cost of depositing the semiconductor in solar cells has dropped significantly in recent years, attention is shifting to reducing the cost of the substrate and electrodes,’ says Michael McGehee, an expert in DSCs from Stanford University, US. ‘Using paper, instead of conventional substrate materials like glass, metal or plastic, is very attractive, but has proven to be difficult because paper is rough. The authors have come up with a very clever design for making dye-sensitised solar cells with glass paper that allows the electrolyte to go right through the paper. Their approach could lead to substantially cheaper solar cells.’ 

Elinor Richards 

Read the paper from EES: 

Dye-sensitized Solar Cells on Glass Paper: TCO-free Highly Bendable Dye-sensitized Solar Cells Inspired by Traditional Korean Door Structures
Seung Il Cha, Yuhyun Kim, Kyu Hyeon Hwang, Yunji Shin, S. H. Seo and Dong Y. Lee
Energy Environ. Sci., 2012, Accepted Manuscript
DOI: 10.1039/C2EE03096A 

Fancy submitting an article to EES? Then why not submit to us today! 

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Efficiently harvesting the power of the sun: EES article featured in Chemistry World

Scientists from Japan and India have created a dye-sensitised solar cell (DSSC) with the highest recorded efficiency of 11.4%, breaking the record set five years ago.

In the search for alternative energy sources to silicon-based photovoltaic cells, DSSCs have been heavily researched. They are a promising option, as they have a low manufacturing cost and the potential for high efficiency. Unfortunately, their conversion efficiency is currently still below that of silicon cells and the research to improve them is extensive.

Interested to know more? Read the full article in Chemistry World here…

High-Efficiency Dye-Sensitized Solar Cell with a Novel Co-Adsorbent
Liyuan Han, Ashraful Islam, Han Chen, Chandrasekharam Malapaka, Shufang Zhang, Xudong Yang and Masatoshi Yanagida
Energy Environ. Sci., 2012, Accepted Manuscript
DOI: 10.1039/C2EE03418B

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7th International Green Energy Conference

Conference Announcement:

7th International Green Energy Conference
&
The 1st DNL Conference on Clean Energy
(IGEC-DCCE)

28-30 May, 2012, Dalian, China

EES is proud to sponsor this meeting and we will be awarding an ‘EES Poster Prize’ during the conference.

Registration now open. Submit your abstract for this conference – Abstract Submission Deadline: 18 January 2012

For more information see conference website

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The most efficient dye sensitised solar cells so far

The highest conversion efficiency reported for dye sensitised solar cells – 11.4% – has been achieved by scientists from Japan. The previous efficiency, reached in 2006 by the same team, was 11.1%.

Dye sensitised solar cells made cheaply are the most promising photovoltaic devices, say the researchers. But, so far, the overall efficiency of I/I3- based dye sensitised solar cells has been limited because light harvesting is not fully achieved and the photo-excited electrons recombine with the acceptor species before the electrode collects them.

Now, the team has made a small donor–acceptor type co-adsorbent that effectively increases short circuit current by offsetting the competitive light absorption by I/I3- . They have improved open circuit potential by introducing butyloxyl chains into the molecule to avoid dye aggregation and reduce the charge recombination. The work could lead to highly efficient dye sensitised solar cells for practical applications, they say.

Read the EES ‘HOT’ article today:

High-Efficiency Dye-Sensitized Solar Cell with a Novel Co-Adsorbent
Liyuan Han, Ashraful Islam, Han Chen, Chandrasekharam Malapaka, Shufang Zhang, Xudong Yang and Masatoshi Yanagida
Energy Environ. Sci., 2012
DOI: 10.1039/c2ee03418b

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HOT article: Oxygen evolution at thin-film WO3 photoanodes

o2 evolution

This ‘HOT’ EES paper indicates that at illuminated WO3 photoanodes, water oxidation is dominated by oxidation of the acid anions in 1.0 M HCl, H2SO4, and HClO4, respectively.

Read this ‘HOT’ article today:

A quantitative assessment of the competition between water and anion oxidation at WO3 photoanodes in acidic aqueous electrolytes
Qixi Mi, Almagul Zhanaidarova, Bruce S. Brunschwig, Harry B. Gray and Nathan S. Lewis
Energy Environ. Sci., 2012, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C2EE02929D

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Microwave synthesis of nanocarbon materials

‘HOT’ article

This Feature Article focuses on the recent advances in synthesis of nanostructured carbon materials using microwave irradiation as the heating source.

The application of microwaves in synthesis of different types of nanocarbons is discussed and the perspectives in the future research directions of microwave assisted nanocarbon synthesis are deliberated as well.

Read this Feature Article:
Recent advances in microwave initiated synthesis of nanocarbon materials
Xinyu Zhang and Zhen Liu
Nanoscale, 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2NR11603K

microwave

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Top ten most-read EES articles in November

This month sees the following articles in EES that are in the top ten most accessed in November:

Plasmonic solar water splitting 
Scott C. Warren and Elijah Thimsen 
Energy Environ. Sci., 2012, 5 , 5133-5146 
DOI: 10.1039/C1EE02875H 

Understanding and recent development of carbon coating on LiFePO4 cathode materials for lithium-ion batteries 
Jiajun Wang and Xueliang Sun 
Energy Environ. Sci., 2012, 5, 5163-5185 
DOI: 10.1039/C1EE01263K 

The electrocapacitive properties of graphene oxide reduced by urea 
Zhibin Lei, Li Lu and X. S. Zhao 
Energy Environ. Sci., 2012, Advance Article 
DOI: 10.1039/C1EE02478G 

Recent advances in micro-/nano-structured hollow spheres for energy applications: From simple to complex systems 
Xiaoyong Lai, Jonathan E. Halpert and Dan Wang 
Energy Environ. Sci., 2012, Advance Article 
DOI: 10.1039/C1EE02426D 

Review of solutions to global warming, air pollution, and energy security 
Mark Z. Jacobson 
Energy Environ. Sci., 2009, 2, 148-173 
DOI: 10.1039/B809990C 

Challenges in the development of advanced Li-ion batteries: a review
 
Vinodkumar Etacheri, Rotem Marom, Ran Elazari, Gregory Salitra and Doron Aurbach 
Energy Environ. Sci., 2011, 4, 3243-3262 
DOI: 10.1039/C1EE01598B 

Graphene based new energy materials 
Yiqing Sun, Qiong Wu and Gaoquan Shi 
Energy Environ. Sci., 2011, 4, 1113-1132 
DOI: 10.1039/C0EE00683A 

Organic solar cells: A new look at traditional models 
Jonathan D. Servaites, Mark A. Ratner and Tobin J. Marks  
Energy Environ. Sci., 2011, 4, 4410-4422
DOI: 10.1039/C1EE01663F 

Recent developments in nanostructured anode materials for rechargeable lithium-ion batteries 
Liwen Ji, Zhan Lin, Mataz Alcoutlabi and Xiangwu Zhang 
Energy Environ. Sci., 2011, 4, 2682-2699 
DOI: 10.1039/C0EE00699H 

Organic tandem solar cells: A review 
Tayebeh Ameri, Gilles Dennler, Christoph Lungenschmied and Christoph J. Brabec 
Energy Environ. Sci., 2009, 2, 347-363 
DOI: 10.1039/B817952B 

Fancy submitting an article to EES? Then why not submit to us today! 

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EES Issue 1 of 2012 out now!

The first issue of Energy & Environmental Science for 2012 is now online! You can read the full issue for free here.

Jane Hordern (Deputy Editor for Energy & Environmental Science) highlights some of the many achievements of the journal in 2011 and look forwards to 2012 in her New Year Editorial. 

The outside front cover features an article on Plasmonic solar water splitting by Scott C. Warren and Elijah Thimsen. 

Issue 1 contains the following Analysis, Review and Perspective articles:

Fancy submitting an article to EES? Then why not submit to us today!

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Reviving rechargeable Li batteries

Read this ‘HOT’ paper:

Reviving rechargeable lithium metal batteries: enabling next-generation high-energy and high-power cells
Aruna Zhamu, Guorong Chen, Chenguang Liu, David Neff, Qing Fang, Zhenning Yu, Wei Xiong, Yanbo Wang, Xiqing Wang and Bor Z. Jang
Energy Environ. Sci., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2EE02911A

Li batteries

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Bioethanol from waste paper

‘HOT’ EES paper

This paper by scientists at Imperial College London, UK provides a techno-economic analysis using new experimental data and process simulation, which shows economic feasibility for bioethanol from waste papers.

Technology performance and economic feasibility of bioethanol production from various waste papers
Lei Wang, Mahdi Sharifzadeh, Richard Templer and Richard J. Murphy
Energy Environ. Sci., 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2EE02935A

bioethanol

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