background preloader

Sustainabillity

Facebook Twitter

TEAMS

New Hybrid Solar Cells Harness More Of The Sun’s Light Spectrum. Scientists at the University of Cambridge in the UK have found a way to improve the efficiency of photovoltaic cells by as much as 25% through harnessing more of the sun’s spectrum than most traditional silicon-based solar cells can.

New Hybrid Solar Cells Harness More Of The Sun’s Light Spectrum

The new design, developed at the university’s Cavendish Laboratory in the Department of Physics, can absorb both red and blue light, and generates electrons from photons at a two-to-one ratio on the blue light spectrum. Most current solar cells lose blue photon energy as heat, leaving them unable to turn more than about 34% of the sunlight they absorb into power. The team, led by professors Neil Greenham and Sir Richard Friend, recently published results in a paper. The hybrid cells have an added organic semiconductor called pentacene, which helps harness blue light energy to strengthen the electrical current coming from the cell, making the product up to 44% efficient.

How to Make Biodiesel at Home. Planetsave — News on Global Warming, Politics, Science, Green Living. Green Building Elements — Reporting on Sustainably Built Environments from Bricks to Cities. Constructing an ecosan toilet. Reinvent Fire: Change Energy Use Forever.