http://cleantechnica.com/2014/05/05/tin-solar-cells-could-push-coal-gas-and-diesel-out-of-the-market/

[links in on-line article]

Scientists Develop Coal-Killing Solar Cell Made From Tin

Weren’t we just saying that perovskite solar cells are the next big
thing? Well, make that tin perovskite solar cells. Tin perovskite solar
cells are suddenly a thing this week, with not one but two major new
research announcements coming out of the US and the UK.

The significance is not so much in the tin perovskite cells’ conversion
efficiency, which is laughably low compared to other solar hot rods on
the market. It’s their potential for commercializing super cheap solar
cells. Tin is an inexpensive, abundant material and its use in solar
cells would drive costs down while alleviating the kind of geopolitical
supply chain issues that bedevil other solar cell materials.

Tin also has the advantage of being easier on public health and the
environment than lead, which is the conventional alternative for
perovskite solar cells.

Tin Perovskite Solar Cells From The US

Perovskite solar cells just sailed across CleanTechnica’s radar a couple
of weeks ago. Perovskite refers to a mineral composed mainly of calcium
titanate. Perovskite has a particular crystalline structure that lends
itself to solar conversion, which can be adapted to modify other
materials for use in solar cells.

The problem is that earlier perovskite solar cell research was focused
on lead, which is toxic, which explains why the latest news just came
out yesterday from Northwestern University under the header “Taking the
lead out of a promising solar cell.”

If Northwestern’s research translates into the commercial market the
impact will be significant.

The new cell gets a commercial market threefer: using materials that are
low cost, non-hazardous, and adaptable to a standard manufacturing process.

Northwestern hit upon the lead substitution partly because tin is in the
same group in the periodic table.

The new solar cell is composed of five layers. The first two, a layer of
conducting glass and a layer of titanium dioxide form the front contact.
 Not for nothing but titanium dioxide should ring some bells –  before
there was Django Unchained we had Titanium Dioxide, Unchained!.

The tricky part is the third layer, the tin perovskite in the form of
methylammonium tin iodide.  Methylammonium tin iodideoxidizes in contact
with air, so that part of the process had to be done in a sealed
environment (a nitrogen glove box, to be specific), along with the next
step since the top of the tin was still exposed at this point.

The next layer is the one that closes the electrical circuit, and this
part was also tricky because the team had to find something that would
not eat away at the tin, which entailed a lot of digging around into the
perovskite structure in order to understand its reactivity.

The final layer is a gold cap, forming the back contact electrode of the
cell.

According to Northwestern, lead perovskite has about 15 percent solar
conversion efficiency, and the research team anticipates that the new
cell could surpass that, although right now it’s hovering at around 5.73
percent (we warned you — don’t laugh!).

Tin Perovskite Solar Cells From The UK

The UK tin perskovite solar cell announcement came out from Oxford
University, a few days before the Northwestern announcement. The team’s
figure for the best lead perskovite efficiency is 17 percent and their
tin version came in around the same as Northwestern’s, at six percent.
Like Northwestern, the Oxford team anticipates bettering the record for
lead, reaching up to 20 percent or more.

The Oxford team focused on a similar problem, the degradation of the tin
layer when exposed to air and moisture, and ended up with a similar
solution: a sealed nitrogen fabrication environment.
Coal-Killing Solar Cells!

As for solar’s ability to compete in the electricity market with coal
and other fossil fuels, the true cost of coal is finally being exposed
including regional air quality and ash disposal issues on top of its
contribution to global warming, and solar is already competitive with
diesel in some global markets.

In the US, cheap shale gas has been pushing coal out of the electricity
market and there are already indications that industries are beginning
to prepare for the day when solar and other renewables push shale gas
out of the energy market, by shifting into higher value products.

Exxon, for example, is looking to expand its gigantic Baytown, Texas
refinery to include a gas-to-plastics operation, and the German chemical
company BASF is exploring the possibility of making its largest
single-site investment ever, by building a shale gas-to-plastics
facility on the Gulf Coast.

By the way, we’re not exactly giving up our crushing on graphene, but
you can expect to hear a lot more about perovskite from CleanTechnica
from now on.


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