Researchers from the University of New South Wales (UNSW) have submitted patent protection and are working on the production of a new class of photostable organic molecules that have been proven to increase the efficiency of the silicon solar cell, to reduce the lifetime of the heat and reduce the life of the Paneel.
Researchers from the University of New South Wales (Unsw) School of Photovoltaic and Renewable Energy Engineering (SPREE) have submitted patent protection and work on scaling the production of a new class molecules that can reduce the efficiency of silicon sun cells, and the lifestyle of the lifeture of the lifesturity of the lifestyle can reduce the lifesturity of the lifesturity of the lifesturity of the lifesturity of the lifesturth.
The findings of the team, published in ACS Energy Letters under the title Singlet Fission C-Si Solar Cells: Beyond TetraceneReport success with the help of a robust, photo table molecule called Dipyrrolonaftyridinedione (DPND) and confirm the commercial benefits for Singlet -Plending.
Professor Ned Ekins-Daukes, lead researcher at Unsw Spree, said that the new class of stable organic molecules has the potential to increase the efficiency of energy conversion.
“It is crucial that we have developed a practical route to higher output silicon solar cells, without the costs and complexity of tandems that the industry can now test,” said Ekins-Daukes.
DPND, a relatively stable dye, was used for the first time to increase the number of carriers in silicon for solar cells.
“Silicon modules nowadays usually achieve efficiency from 20%to 25%. Singlet splitting could increase that figure above 30%, which means that fewer panels are needed for the same energy output, reducing the balance of system costs and opening applications in space-bound roofs and buildings-geinten
“By harvesting energy that would otherwise turn to heat, Singlet-splitting reduces the operating temperatures of silicon cells. Lab and modeling studies suggest that panels can run 2.4 degrees Celsius cooler, which reduces the lifetime for approximately 4.5 years, which reduces the replacement costs and the value of the value of long-durable.”
They added that Singlet -Splugation on silicon solar cells can be built on existing technologies with minimal changes in architecture.
In contrast to most current solar cells, which convert an absorbed photon into a single electron-hole pair, Singlet-splitting makes one energy-rich photon possible to generate two excited electron hole pairs, which effectively doubles the electrical yields of the blueest part of the solar spectrum.
The research says that the use of Singlet -Support Molecules on silicon solar cells could increase the efficiency of energy conversion from 29% to 42%.
Recent work of the team, published in Natural chemistry In 2024 it will show how photoluminescence is emitted from Singlet -splitting is linked to the underlying molecular process. The researchers said that light is being broadcast to control the process, creating a diagnostics for the development of materials and quality control in PV production.
Unsw Spree -University Chief Economist Murad Tayebjee said it is now possible to read the light signatures of Singlet -Splinging with unprecedented clarity.
“This opens the door to discovering and optimizing a wide range of new materials that can stimulate the efficiency of silicon solar cells one day,” Tayebjee said.
The research was supported by the transformative research of the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (Arena) -Restoration -Surrender commercialization (Trac008) program, with Aud 4.8 million (USD 3.1 million) in financing to help bridge the gap between lab demonstrations and commercial acceptance.
Industrial partners are Jinko Solar, Ja Solar, Longi, Canadian Solar, Dasolar, Leadmicro, Jollywood and Xinhao New Energy.
Dr. Jessica Yajie Jiang, senior researcher at Unsw Spree, said that the attraction is clear to manufacturers.
“More energy from the same modula materials, plus cooler running that extends the lifespan,” said Jiang. “We are now moving from elegant science to practical solar products – and the impact on industry, investors and the environment can be profound.”
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