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Flexible silicon solar cell fabrics may soon be possible

By R&D Editors | December 6, 2012

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click to enlarge
 
Left: A cross-sectional image of the new silicon-based optical fiber with solar-cell capabilities. Shown are layers, labeled n+, i and p+, that have been deposited inside the pore of the fiber. Right: A coiled strand of a meter-long solar-cell junction fiber, thinner than the width of a human hair. Image: Badding laboratory, Penn State University   

For the first time, a silicon-based optical fiber with solar cell capabilities has been developed that has been shown to be scalable to many meters in length. The research opens the door to the possibility of weaving together solar cell silicon wires to create flexible, curved, or twisted solar fabrics. The findings by an international team of chemists, physicists, and engineers, led by John Badding, a professor of chemistry at Penn State University, will be posted by Advanced Materials.

The team’s new findings build on earlier work addressing the challenge of merging optical fibers with electronic chips—silicon-based integrated circuits that serve as the building blocks for most semiconductor electronic devices such as solar cells, computers, and cellular phones. Rather than merge a flat chip with a round optical fiber, the team found a way to build a new kind of optical fiber—which is thinner than the width of a human hair—with its own integrated electronic component, thereby bypassing the need to integrate fiber-optics with chips. To do this, they used high-pressure chemistry techniques to deposit semiconducting materials directly, layer by layer, into tiny holes in optical fibers.

Now, in their new research, the team members have used the same high-pressure chemistry techniques to make a fiber out of crystalline silicon semiconductor materials that can function as a solar cell—a photovoltaic device that can generate electrical power by converting solar radiation into direct-current electricity. “Our goal is to extend high-performance electronic and solar-cell function to longer lengths and to more flexible forms. We already have made meters-long fibers but, in principle, our team’s new method could be used to create bendable silicon solar-cell fibers of over 10 meters in length,” Badding says. “Long, fiber-based solar cells give us the potential to do something we couldn’t really do before: We can take the silicon fibers and weave them together into a fabric with a wide range of applications such as power generation, battery charging, chemical sensing, and biomedical devices.”

Badding explains that one of the major limitations of portable electronics such as smartphones and iPads is short battery life. Solar-boosted batteries could help solve this problem. “A solar cell is usually made from a glass or plastic substrate onto which hydrogenated amorphous silicon has been grown,” Badding explains. “Such a solar cell is created using an expensive piece of equipment called a PECVD (plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition) reactor and the end result is something flat with little flexibility. But woven, fiber-based solar cells would be lightweight, flexible configurations that are portable, foldable, and even wearable.” This material could then be connected to electronic devices to power them and charge their batteries. “The military especially is interested in designing wearable power sources for soldiers in the field,” Badding adds.

The team members believe that another advantage of flexibility in solar cell materials is the possibility of collecting light energy at various angles. “A typical solar cell has only one flat surface,” Badding says. “But a flexible, curved solar cell fabric would not be as dependent upon where the light is coming from or where the sun is in the horizon and the time of day.”

Pier J. A. Sazio of the University of Southampton in the United Kingdom and one of the team’s leaders adds, “Another intriguing property of these silicon-fiber devices is that as they are so compact, they can have a very fast response to visible laser light. In fact, we fabricated fiber-based photodetectors with a bandwidth of over 1.8 GHz.”

Source: Penn State University

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