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  1. #1
    Denny Crane!'s Avatar Comes Rei Militaris
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    Default can we stop worrying about oil yet?

    Solar cells: UQAM researcher solves 2 20-year-old problems

    This release is available in French.

    Montreal, April 6, 2010 – Thanks to two technologies developed by Professor Benoît Marsan and his team at the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) Chemistry Department, the scientific and commercial future of solar cells could be totally transformed. Professor Marsan has come up with solutions for two problems that, for the last twenty years, have been hampering the development of efficient and affordable solar cells. His findings have been published in two prestigious scientific journals, the Journal of the American Chemical Society (JACS) and Nature Chemistry.

    The untapped potential of solar energy

    The Earth receives more solar energy in one hour than the entire planet currently consumes in a year! Unfortunately, despite this enormous potential, solar energy is barely exploited. The electricity produced by conventional solar cells, composed of semiconductor materials like silicon, is 5 or 6 times more expensive than from traditional energy sources, such as fossil fuels or hydropower. Over the years, numerous research teams have attempted to develop a solar cell that would be both efficient in terms of energy and inexpensive to produce.

    Dye-sensitized solar cells

    One of the most promising solar cells was designed in the early '90s by Professor Michael Graetzel of the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland. Based on the principle of photosynthesis—the biochemical process by which plants convert light energy into carbohydrate (sugar, their food)—the Graetzel solar cell is composed of a porous layer of nanoparticles of a white pigment, titanium dioxide, covered with a molecular dye that absorbs sunlight, like the chlorophyll in green leaves. The pigment-coated titanium dioxide is immersed in an electrolyte solution, and a platinum-based catalyst completes the package.

    As in a conventional electrochemical cell (such as an alkaline battery), two electrodes (the titanium dioxide anode and the platinum cathode in the Graetzel cell) are placed on either side of a liquid conductor (the electrolyte). Sunlight passes through the cathode and the electrolyte, and then withdraws electrons from the titanium dioxide anode, a semiconductor at the bottom of the cell. These electrons travel through a wire from the anode to the cathode, creating an electrical current. In this way, energy from the sun is converted into electricity.

    Most of the materials used to make this cell are low-cost, easy to manufacture and flexible, allowing them to be integrated into a wide variety of objects and materials. In theory, the Graetzel solar cell has tremendous possibilities. Unfortunately, despite the excellence of the concept, this type of cell has two major problems that have prevented its large-scale commercialisation:

    The electrolyte is: a) extremely corrosive, resulting in a lack of durability; b) densely coloured, preventing the efficient passage of light; and c) limits the device photovoltage to 0.7 volts.
    The cathode is covered with platinum, a material that is expensive, non-transparent and rare.
    Despite numerous attempts, until Professor Marsan's recent contribution, no one had been able to find a satisfactory solution to these problems.

    Professor Marsan's solutions

    Professor Marsan and his team have been working for several years on the design of an electrochemical solar cell. His work has involved novel technologies, for which he has received numerous patents. In considering the problems of the cell developed by his Swiss colleague, Professor Marsan realized that two of the technologies developed for the electrochemical cell could also be applied to the Graetzel solar cell, specifically:

    For the electrolyte, entirely new molecules have been created in the laboratory whose concentration has been increased through the contribution of Professor Livain Breau, also of the Chemistry Department. The resulting liquid or gel is transparent and non-corrosive and can increase the photovoltage, thus improving the cell's output and stability.
    For the cathode, the platinum can be replaced by cobalt sulphide, which is far less expensive. It is also more efficient, more stable and easier to produce in the laboratory.
    Immediately following their publication in JACS and Nature Chemistry, Professor Marsan's proposals were received enthusiastically by the scientific community. Many view his contribution as a major research breakthrough on the production of low-cost and efficient solar cells.

    ###
    Links to the articles in JACS and Nature Chemistry:
    http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ja905970y
    http://www.nature.com/nchem/journal/...nchem.610.html

    Information:
    Professor Benoît Marsan
    Department of Chemistry
    Université du Québec à Montréal
    Phone: 514 987-3000, ext. 7980
    Email: marsan.benoit@uqam.ca

    Source: Claire Bouchard, Press Relations Officer
    Phone: 514 987-3000, ext. 2248
    Email: bouchard.claire@uqam.ca

  2. #2
    Elfdude's Avatar Tribunus
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    Default Re: can we stop worrying about oil yet?

    I think the question is can oil companies and lobbyists stop worrying about oil?

  3. #3
    Denny Crane!'s Avatar Comes Rei Militaris
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    Default Re: can we stop worrying about oil yet?

    Quote Originally Posted by elfdude View Post
    I think the question is can oil companies and lobbyists stop worrying about oil?
    Much like I posted on batteries I do wonder if this is just more hype.

    Nanosolar was supposed to save us all, yet 4 years on that company and First Solar have achieved little. 4 MW a month and in a million years they'll provide the capacity...

  4. #4

    Default Re: can we stop worrying about oil yet?

    Yeah, but how much capital do the firms pioneering this technology have compared to that which is available to oil companies for exploration, drilling, and other technologies for oil production?
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  5. #5

    Default Re: can we stop worrying about oil yet?

    Well, to begin with, you will have to replace almost every vehicle and transport around the planet with vehicles that utilize this type of power source, then you can start thinking about stop worrying about oil.

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    Adar's Avatar Just doing it
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    Default Re: can we stop worrying about oil yet?

    Quote Originally Posted by Timotheus Londinium View Post
    Well, to begin with, you will have to replace almost every vehicle and transport around the planet with vehicles that utilize this type of power source, then you can start thinking about stop worrying about oil.
    Hydrogen fuel cells is the answer to that. We already know that we can create very efficient cars that get their power from fuel cells. The problem is that we haven't been able to produce the hydrogen necessary to fuel them.

  7. #7
    Denny Crane!'s Avatar Comes Rei Militaris
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    Default Re: can we stop worrying about oil yet?

    Quote Originally Posted by Adar View Post
    Hydrogen fuel cells is the answer to that. We already know that we can create very efficient cars that get their power from fuel cells. The problem is that we haven't been able to produce the hydrogen necessary to fuel them.
    If we had cheaper solar cells every southfacing garden in the world could have a hydrogen station, they have the technology for this the only problem is the expense.

  8. #8

    Default Re: can we stop worrying about oil yet?

    Solar is a direct competitor with coal not really oil. The problem with sticking a solar panel on a car remain the same no matter how efficient the panel; the Sun is not a reliable source of fuel.

  9. #9
    Denny Crane!'s Avatar Comes Rei Militaris
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    Default Re: can we stop worrying about oil yet?

    With improving battery technology that isn't really an issue, we wouldn't be looking at powering cars 'on the go' in fact I don't know of a single manufacturer thinking seriously about that. Ford and Microsoft have teamed up to create an energy management system that charges car overnight when load time is least in order to reduce cost and strain on the grid, that is the future of car charging not having panels on top.

    As Motiv-8 noted though these people are receiving fairly small amounts (dispersed over many companies) in comparison to oil. though the big problem with oil isn't the production peaking so much as chronic underinvestment in new capacity.

    It would be interesting to see what effect this would have on energy markets if the ROI became viable enough that a large amount of homes decided to install solar panels. Micro-power production would remove strain on the grid to a certain extent and would greatly reduce demand. That could be catastophic as it would distract from the needed solutions.

  10. #10

    Default Re: can we stop worrying about oil yet?

    Expense and motivation. I believe part of this is a societal issue, a common dependence on that which is known and familiar.
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  11. #11
    Denny Crane!'s Avatar Comes Rei Militaris
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    Default Re: can we stop worrying about oil yet?

    Quote Originally Posted by motiv-8 View Post
    Expense and motivation. I believe part of this is a societal issue, a common dependence on that which is known and familiar.
    If it was going to save me money I'd be motivated, oil prices are going a bit mental over in the UK. I'm paying £1.25 a litre which is just crazy talk, and it is expected to rise even further over the summer. In a year or two the UK will be paying £1.50 a litre at the pump and at that point... what was expensive before might not seem so expensive.

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