News Solartex
Advertisement
  • Home
  • CATEGORIES
    • Solar Panels
    • Solar Installation
    • Residential Solar
    • Commercial Solar
    • Solar Contractors
    • Solar Batteries
    • Solar Inverters
    • Solar Lightening
    • Solar Pumps
    • Accessories
  • MORE
    • CONTACT US
    • SOLARTEX USA
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • CATEGORIES
    • Solar Panels
    • Solar Installation
    • Residential Solar
    • Commercial Solar
    • Solar Contractors
    • Solar Batteries
    • Solar Inverters
    • Solar Lightening
    • Solar Pumps
    • Accessories
  • MORE
    • CONTACT US
    • SOLARTEX USA
No Result
View All Result
News Solartex
No Result
View All Result
Home Solar Panels

Dartmouth engineering team discovers new high-performance solar cell material

admin by admin
March 14, 2024
in Solar Panels
0
Dartmouth engineering team discovers new high-performance solar cell material
0
SHARES
5
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Dartmouth engineering team discovers new high-performance solar cell material

by Catha Mayor for Dartmouth News

Hanover NH (SPX) Mar 14, 2024






A Dartmouth Engineering-led study published in Joule presents the discovery of an entirely new high-performance material for solar absorbers-the central part of a solar cell that turns light into electricity-that is both stable and earth-abundant. The researchers used a unique high-throughput computational screening method to accelerate the discovery process and were able to quickly evaluate approximately 40,000 known candidate materials.



“This is the first example in the field of photovoltaics where a new material has been found through this type of approach with an experimental follow-up,” says Dartmouth’s Hodgson Family Associate Professor of Engineering Geoffroy Hautier. “Most people study one or two materials at a time, and we looked at forty-thousand.”



Dartmouth researcher Zhenkun Yuan is first author on the study with co-authors including research associate Yihuang Xiong, engineering PhD candidates Gideon Kassa and Andrew Pike, and engineering professors Hautier and Jifeng Liu-as well as researchers from eight other partner institutions.



The solar absorber material was confirmed in the lab to be not only promising in its ability to efficiently transform light into electricity, but also highly stable in both air and water. “You can put it out for six months and it will stay the same,” notes Hautier. “When you don’t have to worry about moisture and air contamination, that significantly reduces your costs.”



The study points out that, normally, finding new solar materials is tedious and slow with an overwhelming number of options to even begin to consider.



“We’ve been building a database of known materials-both naturally-occurring and man-made-for a long time,” explains Hautier, “and that’s giving us the capability to rapidly screen and make decisions on what may or may not be useful. We weren’t able to screen for stability, but we could narrow it down to approximately twenty reasonable solar materials-among the thousands and thousands of possibilities-and after talking with our colleagues, we had a feeling this one would be stable.”



The team plans to continue to improve the tools for even better screening, and also explore the entire family of materials they call “Zintls,” which could lead to enhancements and optimizations of the discovered material.



“There are a lot of opportunities around further characterizing this material and understanding it better such as how it absorbs light and how to make it as a thin film,” says Liu who conducts and oversees materials testing in his lab at Dartmouth. “Collaboration is crucial. It takes a whole community of thinkers and many different skills to make it all work-computing, experimentation, fabrication, characterization, optimization-and you need to put all that together in a team.”



“We won’t have it as a solar panel tomorrow,” adds Hautier, “but we think this family of materials is exceptional and worth looking at.”



Research Report:Discovery of the Zintl-phosphide BaCd2P2 as a long carrier lifetime and stable solar absorber


Related Links

Dartmouth Engineering

All About Solar Energy at SolarDaily.com



Source link

Previous Post

Global solar report finds billions in revenue loss due to underperformance

Next Post

Landfilling vs. Recycling 10-Year-Old Solar Equipment

admin

admin

Next Post
Landfilling vs. Recycling 10-Year-Old Solar Equipment

Landfilling vs. Recycling 10-Year-Old Solar Equipment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected test

  • 23.9k Followers
  • 99 Subscribers
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
AIKO vs. Trina Solar Panels

AIKO vs. Trina Solar Panels

May 15, 2024
Solar Battery Covers | Cover My Inverter

Solar Battery Covers | Cover My Inverter

October 1, 2023
ADT Solar to close 22 of 38 branches

ADT Solar to close 22 of 38 branches

November 2, 2023
Adverse Weather Conditions Solar Panels

Adverse Weather Conditions Solar Panels

October 1, 2023
How many Solar Panels Do I Need?

How many Solar Panels Do I Need?

1
The 5 Best Solar Panels For Your Home or Business

The 5 Best Solar Panels For Your Home or Business

0
The Truth About German Made Solar Panels – Don’t Fall For The Scam!

The Truth About German Made Solar Panels – Don’t Fall For The Scam!

0
Electric Element vs Heat Pump Calculator – MC Electrical

Electric Element vs Heat Pump Calculator – MC Electrical

0
Trina to unveil 10-MWh ESS to North American market this summer

Trina Storage’s Elementa 2 Elevate system completes UL assessments

May 13, 2025
Silfab sells off $110 million of 45X manufacturing tax credits

Silfab sells off $110 million of 45X manufacturing tax credits

May 13, 2025
RWE begins construction on nearly 100-MW Ohio solar project

RWE begins construction on nearly 100-MW Ohio solar project

May 13, 2025
Pivot Energy developing 5.75-MW solar project for Colorado State University

Pivot Energy developing 5.75-MW solar project for Colorado State University

May 13, 2025

Recent News

Trina to unveil 10-MWh ESS to North American market this summer

Trina Storage’s Elementa 2 Elevate system completes UL assessments

May 13, 2025
Silfab sells off $110 million of 45X manufacturing tax credits

Silfab sells off $110 million of 45X manufacturing tax credits

May 13, 2025
RWE begins construction on nearly 100-MW Ohio solar project

RWE begins construction on nearly 100-MW Ohio solar project

May 13, 2025
Pivot Energy developing 5.75-MW solar project for Colorado State University

Pivot Energy developing 5.75-MW solar project for Colorado State University

May 13, 2025
News Solartex

©2024 SOLARTEX USA LLC

Navigate Site

  • Home
  • Categories
  • Privacy Policy
  • Term of Use
  • Contact Us

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • CATEGORIES
    • Solar Panels
    • Solar Installation
    • Residential Solar
    • Commercial Solar
    • Solar Contractors
    • Solar Batteries
    • Solar Inverters
    • Solar Lightening
    • Solar Pumps
    • Accessories
  • MORE
    • CONTACT US
    • SOLARTEX USA

©2024 SOLARTEX USA LLC

Cleantalk Pixel