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ACS News Service Weekly PressPac: June 24, 2015
All-plastic solar cell could help power future flexible electronics
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ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
If you picture a solar panel, it鈥檚 most likely dark blue or black, and rigid and flat. Now imagine one that鈥檚 semitransparent, ultra-thin and bendable. Scientists are closing in on making the latter version a reality. They report in the journal ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces the development of a see-through, bendable solar cell made entirely out of plastic. The device could help power the coming wave of flexible electronics.
Most solar cells you see on rooftops or in large power-plant arrays are made of relatively heavy and stiff materials. But this version doesn鈥檛 lend itself to small or flexible electronics. So Yinhua Zhou and colleagues are investigating lighter-weight plastics to see if they can come up with a better way to address this need for a sustainable energy source for future gadgets.
The researchers built a solar cell by applying a conductive polymer film to a plastic surface and treating it with phosphoric acid to enhance the rate at which an electric current can pass through it. Their tiny, 10-square-millimeter (0.015-square-inch), all-plastic cell reached a voltage of 0.84 volts (a typical AAA battery produces 1.5 volts).聽
The authors acknowledge funding from the Recruitment Program of Global Youth Experts, the , the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities, , the Postdoctoral Science Foundation of China and the Open Foundation of Hubei Key Laboratory of Low Dimensional Optoelectronic Materials and Devices.
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