Science & Technology - Posted by Futurity-Jenny Leonard on Thursday, September 17, 2009 19:27 - 7 Comments    
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Nanotubes may yield greener solar cells

nanotube

In a carbon nanotube-based photodiode, electrons (blue) and holes (red) release their excess energy to efficiently create more electron-hole pairs when light is shined on the device. (Credit: Nathan Gabor)

nanotube

In a carbon nanotube-based photodiode, electrons (blue) and holes (red) release their excess energy to efficiently create more electron-hole pairs when light is shined on the device. (Credit: Nathan Gabor)

CORNELL (US)—Using a carbon nanotube instead of traditional silicon, researchers have created the basic elements of a solar cell that may lead to much more efficient ways of converting light to electricity.

The researchers fabricated, tested, and measured a simple solar cell called a photodiode, formed from an individual carbon nanotube. Reported online Sept. 11 in the journal Science, the researchers describe how their device converts light to electricity in an extremely efficient process that multiplies the amount of electrical current that flows. This process could prove important for next-generation high efficiency solar cells, the researchers say.

“We are not only looking at a new material, but we actually put it into an application—a true solar cell device,” said first author Nathan Gabor, a Cornell University graduate student.

The researchers used a single-walled carbon nanotube, which is essentially a rolled-up sheet of graphene, to create their solar cell. About the size of a DNA molecule, the nanotube was wired between two electrical contacts and close to two electrical gates, one negatively and one positively charged.

Their work was inspired in part by previous research in which scientists created a diode, which is a simple transistor that allows current to flow in only one direction, using a single-walled nanotube. The Cornell team wanted to see what would happen if they built something similar, but this time shined light on it.

Shining lasers of different colors onto different areas of the nanotube, they found that higher levels of photon energy had a multiplying effect on how much electrical current was produced.

Further study revealed that the narrow, cylindrical structure of the carbon nanotube caused the electrons to be neatly squeezed through one by one. The electrons moving through the nanotube became excited and created new electrons that continued to flow. The nanotube, they discovered, may be a nearly ideal photovoltaic cell because it allowed electrons to create more electrons by utilizing the spare energy from the light.

This is unlike today’s solar cells, in which extra energy is lost in the form of heat, and the cells require constant external cooling.

Though they have made a device, scaling it up to be inexpensive and reliable would be a serious challenge for engineers, Gabor says.

“What we’ve observed is that the physics is there,” he notes.

The research was supported by Cornell’s Center for Nanoscale Systems and the Cornell NanoScale Science and Technology Facility, both National Science Foundation facilities, as well as the Microelectronics Advanced Research Corporation Focused Research Center on Materials, Structures, and Devices. Researchers from the University of Michigan and the National Institute for Nanotechnology at University of Alberta contributed to the work.

Cornell University news: www.news.cornell.edu

7 Comments

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David Parise
Sep 18, 2009 14:34

Just a general post not directly related to this article, but rather the site in general. This is so fantastic. I read about this project today. Many thanks to the participating universities for helping get new information out, rather than relying on journalists who often lean toward hype and misinformation rather than fact when it comes to science reporting. I’ll be telling everyone I know about this.

Christianna Lewis
Sep 18, 2009 22:52

Just joining David, my Prof. directed me to this site today, and I can’t wait to start digging in. As someone who wants to go into science writing, I know that the science comes before the writing for a reason!

John Bennett
Sep 19, 2009 0:59

I realize that it’s a long way from a laboratory demonstration to the shelves at Home Depot, but this sounds exciting. Still, I’m left with questions. It sounds like they got more current with higher frequency light. What happens farther up the spectrum? Do you get more current, or do the photons just smash the tube? I want graphs and charts!

Other than that, the site looks great. The articles I’ve seen so far are well written, and I like the simple, functional layout. Opposable thumbs up!

JMB

Scott Kallio
Sep 19, 2009 16:46

This website is essential to the proper rebuilding of our industrial,educational&flow of information to identify achievable areas of investment while a new linear infrastructure is established for the worlds populace.

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Oct 1, 2009 21:36

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Oct 2, 2009 15:45

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Bala Subramanian
Jun 25, 2010 10:54

The combination of the conventional use of solar power – converting heat to electricity, heat to steam etc., converting light directly to electric current shows that we can sustain societal life with modern ways – without having to give up anything when we switch from fossile fuels to Solar. The production of Solar cells causes more harm to environment than the continued use of fossile fuels does not sound right to me. Any one has information on this point of view (pov)?

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