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Polymer / fullerene photovoltaic devices: new materials and innovative processes for high-volume manufacture

Reference Number
EP/I028641/1
Title
Polymer / fullerene photovoltaic devices: new materials and innovative processes for high-volume manufacture
Status
Completed
Energy Categories
Renewable Energy Sources(Solar Energy, Photovoltaics)
Research Types
Basic and strategic applied research
Science and Technology Fields
PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Chemistry)
PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Physics)
UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation
Not Cross-cutting
Principal Investigator
Professor DG Lidzey
Physics and Astronomy
University of Sheffield
Award Type
Standard
Funding Source
EPSRC
Start Date
01 October 2011
End Date
31 March 2015
Duration
42 months
Total Grant Value
£967,004
Industrial Sectors
Materials sciences
Region
Yorkshire & Humberside
Programme
Physical Sciences
Investigators
Principal Investigator
Professor DG Lidzey, Physics and Astronomy, University of Sheffield
Other Investigator
Dr A R Buckley, Physics and Astronomy, University of Sheffield
Dr ADF Dunbar, Chemical and Process Engineering, University of Sheffield
Dr A Iraqi, Chemistry, University of Sheffield
Professor R Jones, Physics and Astronomy, University of Sheffield
Professor A Ryan, Physics and Astronomy, University of Sheffield
Industrial Collaborator
Project Contact, Polysolar Ltd
Project Contact, Xennia Technology Ltd
Web Site
Objectives
Abstract
The harvesting of sunlight has the potential to revolutionize the way mankind generates electricity. At present however, only a small fraction (0.02% in 2008) of the world's total electrical power is generated using sunlight. Photovoltaic (PV) installations based on crystalline silicon are an increasingly popular way of generating electricity from solar-radiation, however such installations suffer from a relatively long pay-back time resulting from their high cost of manufacture. There is thus growing interest in the development photovoltaics based on organic (polymeric) materials (OPV) that can in principle be produced at low-cost, over very large areas utilizing solution-based processes that do not require a large energy input. At present however, even the best lab-based OPVs have an efficiency that is significantly lower than that of standard crystalline silicon (~8% compared with ~18%), coupled with a relatively short operational lifetime - attributes that have partly precluded their commercialization.There is nevertheless great interest in exploring the scale-up of OPVs, despite the fact that no common consensus has been reached on the best route to deposit multilayer architectures at high-speed. This problem is compounded by the fact that many of the materials that have the highest efficiency in OPV devices often have rather low solubility; properties that limit their application in high-speed manufacture processes.Addressing these issues lies at the heart of our proposed research. Firstly, we will engineer the chemical structure of state-of-the-art low energy-gap donor polymers to significantly improve their solubility and processability. We will then explore the deposition of such materials into OPVs using spray-based techniques. The thin-films formed will be characterized using high-resolution electron microscopy together with X-ray and neutron-scattering. The project team we have assembled for this task have leading expertise in organic-electronics, polymer-synthesis, polymer-physics and practical manufacturing processes.Our project is significantly strengthened by funds from the European Regional Development Fund (Project Mercury) to purchase an automated aerosol deposition system and fund postdoctoral and postgraduate researchers. We have ready route for commercialization via our (unfunded) links with a TSB-funded project that intends to develop OPVs for transparent window-glass applications. We anticipate the outcome of our work will be a materials set and a scalable process for high speed OPV manufacture.We will gain impact for our work through showcasing scaled-up OPV devices at the Sheffield Solar Farm and by interacting with artists and designers who wish to use organic photovoltaics in their work. We will also gain valuable support and publicity for our work through 'Project Sunshine'; a flagship project at Sheffield that promotes research into the utilization of solar energy to solve problemsrelated to mankind's growing energy-needs and food-production in a time of growing climate uncertainty
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Added to Database
02/12/11