< http://www.photonics.com/todaysheadlines/article.asp?id=6070 >

IR Solar Cell Record Set


EWING, New Jersey, Jan. 12, 2006 -- Global Photonic Energy
 Corp. (GPEC), a developer of organic photovoltaic technology
 for high-power solar cells, announced that its research
 partners at Princeton University and the University of
 Southern California have achieved a record in an organic
 solar cell that is responsive to light in the near-infrared 
range of the solar spectrum. 
   The achievement is the highest level of conversion performance
 yet achieved for an organic solar cell in the IR portion of
 the solar spectrum, GPEC said. 
   GPEC sponsors research by Professor Stephen R. Forrest at
 Princeton and Professor Mark E. Thompson at the University of
 Southern California. They reported their results in a recent
 issue of Applied Physics Letters. 
   Forrest's research team has focused on organic "small-molecule"
 devices that are assembled literally a molecule at a time in
 highly efficient nanostructures. These devices have layers or
 structural elements that can be extremely small -- only half
 a billionth of a meter thick -- and can be applied to low-cost,
 flexible plastic surfaces. 
   "This latest device demonstrates that significant power can be
 harvested from the IR and near-IR portion of the solar spectrum,"
 said Forrest. "In fact, this novel approach has the potential to
 double the power output of organic solar devices with power
 harvested from the near-IR and IR portion of the solar spectrum. 
   "With this approach, we are well on our way to power levels
 exceeding 100 watts per meter," he said. 
   Near-infrared (NIR) radiation is invisible to the human eye.
 Many night-vision devices operate by sensing IR light emitted
 by warm objects. Under only NIR radiation, the Princeton solar
 cell would appear to be generating power in the dark, since 
the human eye is only sensitive to visible light. 
   Traditionally, photovoltaic, or solar, cells have been constructed
 of an inorganic semiconductor like silicon. Efficient silicon-based
 devices, especially those with large surface areas, are difficult
 and expensive to produce. Although the cost of silicon solar cells
 has dropped dramatically since the 1950s, further reductions and
 new capabilities are needed for additional market penetration 
and broader adoption, GPEC said. 
   Recent efforts have focused on the use of "organic" materials.
 Organic semiconductors contain carbon and are capable of achieving
 ultralow-cost solar power generation that is competitive with
 traditional fossil-fuel sources. Organic materials have the 
potential to achieve ultralow cost production costs and high-power
 output, GMAC said. They can be applied to virtually any surface
 using a method akin to spray painting and can also be used in 
flexible applications. 
   One challenge for organic solar cells has been the efficient
 capture and conversion of sunlight. Sunlight is comprised of 
photons (particles of light) that are delivered across a spectrum
 that includes invisible ultraviolet (UV) light, the visible
 spectrum of colors -- violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow,
 orange and red -- and the invisible IR spectrum. The amount
 of incoming photons across the UV, visible and IR spectrums
 is about 4, 5 and 45 percent, respectively. The photons absorbed
 by a solar cell directly impacts the power output. The best
 organic solar cells absorb and convert only about a third of
 the total available light utilizing primarily the visible portion
 of the spectrum. 
   For more information, visit: www.globalphotonic.com 


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< http://www.alternate-energy.net/N/news.php?detail=n1137003348.news >



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