Researchers Create Graphene Organic Photovoltaic Panels


Despite the fact that graphene has been known to exist for decades, only recently have researchers begun to study graphene in earnest. The reason for the relatively late start into research using grapheme is that the material was difficult to make in quantities needed for research.

Once that hurdle was overcome, researchers quickly started to use graphene in all manner of study for a variety of uses. Graphene is being studied for use in semiconductors as a multiplier able to make processors many times faster than what we have access to today. Researchers are still studying better and cheaper methods of making grapheme and one important method was discovered in October of 2009 for growing graphene.

A team of researchers at the University of Southern California has discovered a way to use graphene to produce a flexible, printable sheet only four or less atoms thick. These graphene sheets can then be bound to a flexible polymer sheet to create a new type of organic photovoltaic cell or solar panel.

The resulting solar panel is thin and very flexible and the team believes that the material may one day be used for creating clothing that can generate power when worn in the sun. The big advantage of the graphene solar panel is that it is very flexible, much more so than existing solar panel materials.

"Organic photovoltaic (OPV) cells have been proposed as a means to achieve low cost energy due to their ease of manufacture, light weight, and compatibility with flexible substrates," wrote Chongwu Zhou, a professor of electrical engineering in the USC Viterbi School of Engineering, in a paper recently published in the journal ACS Nano.

The team creates the flexible graphene sheets needed for the solar panels by chemical vapor deposition. Carbon atoms are deposited in the form of graphene films onto a nickel plate from a methane gas. After the molecules are deposited, a thin protective layer of thermo plastic covers them. After the protective layer is deposited, the nickel plate is dissolved in an acid bath.

(DailyTech)

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