Antifreeze, cheap materials may lead to low-cost solar energy
http://oregonstate.edu/ua/ncs/archives/2013/jul/antifreeze-cheap-materials-may-lead-low-cost-solar-energy[font face=Serif][font size=5]Antifreeze, cheap materials may lead to low-cost solar energy[/font]
07/03/2013
[font size=4]The study this story is based on is available in ScholarsArchive@OSU;
http://bit.ly/10Zj0SK[/font]
[font size=3]CORVALLIS, Ore. A process combining some comparatively cheap materials and the same antifreeze that keeps an automobile radiator from freezing in cold weather may be the key to making solar cells that cost less and avoid toxic compounds, while further expanding the use of solar energy.
And when perfected, this approach might also cook up the solar cells in a microwave oven similar to the one in most kitchens.
Engineers at Oregon State University have determined that ethylene glycol, commonly used in antifreeze products, can be a low-cost solvent that functions well in a continuous flow reactor an approach to
making thin-film solar cells that is easily scaled up for mass production at industrial levels.
The research,
just published in Material Letters, a professional journal, also concluded this approach will work with CZTS, or copper zinc tin sulfide, a compound of significant interest for solar cells due to its excellent optical properties and the fact these materials are cheap and environmentally benign.
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