Credit: University of Queensland
Safer
and more environmentally friendly indoor solar panels could soon help power
electronics in homes and offices, thanks to University of Queensland
researchers. A team of chemical engineers led by UQ's Dr. Miaoqiang Lyu and
Professor Lianzhou Wang have developed a new fabrication method that eliminates
the need for toxic lead and other hazardous solvents in perovskite indoor solar
panels. The findings are published in the journal ACS
Energy Letters.
"Indoor solar cells themselves are
not new, but the power conversion efficiency of the commercial silicon-based
technology is only around 10%," Dr. Lyu said. "Halide perovskites are
an emerging technology that could replace silicon, offering much higher
efficiencies and commercial potential.
"However, most still rely on
lead-based hazardous materials. The technology we developed eliminates those
materials while still delivering high efficiency."
UQ Ph.D. student Zitong Wang, who is
under the supervision of Dr. Lyu and Professor Wang, developed a safe and
scalable vapor-based manufacturing process for fabricating high-quality lead-free
perovskite material with fewer performance-limiting defects.
Indoor perovskite solar cells operate under low-intensity artificial light,
such as light-emitting diodes (LEDs) and fluorescent lamps.
Using the new method, the panels
achieved an efficiency of 16.36%—the highest reported for this type of lead-free
perovskite indoor solar cell made using an industry-compatible evaporation
method.
"This material has very attractive
properties that can absorb indoor light and convert very weak indoor light
efficiently into electricity," Dr. Lyu said.
"By removing those solvents
entirely, the process is much better suited to scalable manufacturing."
Lead-free perovskite indoor solar cells
are also increasingly viewed as an alternative to coin-cell and button
batteries for low-power electronics like environmental sensors, wearables,
medical and health monitoring devices, and small consumer electronics.
Supermarkets trialing battery-powered
electronic shelf labels, which replace thousands of paper price tickets and
reduce manual labor, are among the potential early applications of the
technology.
"With suitable voltage management,
these devices can replace coin‑cell batteries, reducing the number of small
batteries that end up as waste or in children's toys," Dr. Lyu said.
Panels fabricated using the UQ process
are thin, scalable and can be made on flexible plastic and in different shapes,
making them easy to integrate into a wide range of products.
The next step is sealing the panels
before further testing.
"I think the key here is
encapsulation, to protect the material from oxygen and moisture," Dr. Lyu
said. "People will probably see perovskite indoor panels and integrated
consumer electronics in the market in the next few years."
Source: Cleaning up toxic solar panels to bring them indoors

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