Cheap solar cells made from shrimp shells

shrimp
Heterocarpus ensifer. Credit: NOAA

The materials chitin and chitosan found in the shells are abundant and significantly cheaper to produce than the expensive metals such as ruthenium, which is similar to platinum, that are currently used in making nanostructured solar-cells.

Currently the efficiency of solar cells made with these biomass-derived materials is low but if it can be improved they could be placed in everything from wearable chargers for tablets, phones and smartwatches, to semi-transparent films over window.

Researchers, from QMUL's School of Engineering and Materials Science, used a process known as hydrothermal carbonization to create the carbon quantum dots (CQDs) from the widely and cheaply available chemicals found in . They then coat standard zinc oxide nanorods with the CQDs to make the solar cells.

Dr Joe Briscoe, one of the researchers on the project, said: "This could be a great new way to make these versatile, quick and easy to produce solar cells from readily available, . Once we've improved their efficiency they could be used anywhere that are used now, particularly to charge the kinds of devices people carry with them every day.

Professor Magdalena Titirici, Professor of Sustainable Materials Technology at QMUL, said: "New techniques mean that we can produce exciting new materials from organic by-products that are already easily available. Sustainable materials can be both high-tech and low-cost."

"We've also used biomass, in that case algae, to make the kinds of supercapacitors that can be used to store power in consumer electronics, in defibrillators and for energy recovery in vehicles."

More information: Joe Briscoe, Adam Marinovic, Marta Sevilla, Steve Dunn and Magdalena Titirici 'Biomass-derived Carbon Quantom Dots Sensitizers for Solid-State Nanostructured Solar Cells', Angewandte Chemie International Edition (2015)

Citation: Cheap solar cells made from shrimp shells (2015, February 18) retrieved 29 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2015-02-cheap-solar-cells-shrimp-shells.html
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