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Costs Fall with First Ever 100% Carbon Solar Cell

Researchers have developed a solar cell made entirely of carbon, an inexpensive substitute for the pricey materials currently used in conventional solar panels.

"Carbon has the potential to deliver high performance at a low cost," says study senior author Zhenan Bao, a professor of chemical engineering at Stanford University.  "To the best of our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of a working solar cell that has all of the components made of carbon. This study builds on previous work done in our lab."

Unlike rigid silicon solar panels that adorn many rooftops, the thin film prototype is made of carbon materials that can be coated from solution.


The all-carbon solar cell consists of a photoactive layer, which absorbs sunlight, sandwiched between two electrodes. (Credit: Mark Shwartz/Stanford)

 "Perhaps in the future we can look at alternative markets where flexible carbon solar cells are coated on the surface of buildings, on windows, or on cars to generate electricity," Bao says.

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The coating technique also has the potential to reduce manufacturing costs, says graduate student Michael Vosgueritchian, co-lead author of the study with postdoctoral researcher Marc Ramuz.

"Processing silicon-based solar cells requires a lot of steps," Vosgueritchian explains. "But our entire device can be built using simple coating methods that don't require expensive tools and machines."

Carbon nanomaterials

The experimental solar cell consists of a photoactive layer, which absorbs sunlight, sandwiched between two electrodes.  In a typical thin film solar cell, the electrodes are made of conductive metals and indium tin oxide (ITO).

"Materials like indium are scarce and becoming more expensive as the demand for solar cells, touchscreen panels, and other electronic devices grows," Bao says.  "Carbon, on the other hand, is low cost and Earth-abundant."

For the study, published in ACS Nano, Bao and her colleagues replaced the silver and ITO used in conventional electrodes with graphene-sheets of carbon that are one atom thick-and single-walled carbon nanotubes that are 10,000 times narrower than a human hair.

"Carbon nanotubes have extraordinary electrical conductivity and light-absorption properties," Bao says.

For the active layer, the scientists used material made of carbon nanotubes and "buckyballs"-soccer ball-shaped carbon molecules just one nanometer in diameter.  The research team recently filed a patent for the entire device.

"Every component in our solar cell, from top to bottom, is made of carbon materials," Vosgueritchian says. "Other groups have reported making all-carbon solar cells, but they were referring to just the active layer in the middle, not the electrodes."

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One drawback of the all-carbon prototype is that it primarily absorbs near-infrared wavelengths of light, contributing to a laboratory efficiency of less than 1 percent-much lower than commercially available solar cells.  "We clearly have a long way to go on efficiency," Bao says.  "But with better materials and better processing techniques, we expect that the efficiency will go up quite dramatically."

Improving efficiency

The Stanford team is looking at a variety of ways to improve efficiency. "Roughness can short-circuit the device and make it hard to collect the current," Bao says. "We have to figure out how to make each layer very smooth by stacking the nanomaterials really well."

The researchers are also experimenting with carbon nanomaterials that can absorb more light in a broader range of wavelengths, including the visible spectrum. "Materials made of carbon are very robust," Bao says. "They remain stable in air temperatures of nearly 1,100 degrees Fahrenheit."

The ability of carbon solar cells to out-perform conventional devices under extreme conditions could overcome the need for greater efficiency. "We believe that all-carbon solar cells could be used in extreme environments, such as at high temperatures or at high physical stress," Vosgueritchian says. "But obviously we want the highest efficiency possible and are working on ways to improve our device."

"Photovoltaics will definitely be a very important source of power that we will tap into in the future," Bao says. "We have a lot of available sunlight. We've got to figure out some way to use this natural resource that is given to us."

By.  Mark Shwartz-Stanford

Other authors of the study are Peng Wei of Stanford and Chenggong Wang and Yongli Gao of the University of Rochester. The research was funded by the Global Climate and Energy Project at Stanford and the Air Force Office for Scientific Research.

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