NEWS OF THE WEEK LOTS 0' DOTS UC Santa Barbara researchers use cost-saving techniques to produce arrays of solar cells that use dye molecules or nanometersized CdSe-CdS quantum dots to collect light. Micrographs show that the quantum-dot coverage (white specks) can be increased, which, in turn, improves performance.
PHOTOVOLTAICS
In the Santa Barbara design, photons are collected by molecules of merbromin, a fluorescein d^e, that are adsorbed on a thin gpld film. The film is supported by a layer of Ti0 2 that, in turn, rests on titanium. As light is absorbed in the dye layer, the molecules liberate energetic electrons that are transported through the gold film, injected into the Ti0 2 sorbs sunlight and converts the layer, and ultimately conducted to light energy into electrons and the Ti electrode. Working with holes (positively charged electron Galen D. Stucky, a professor of vacancies). At the same time, the chemistry and materials, the team material separates electrons and is also studying other types of light holes and delivers the charge car- collectors. riers to current collectors. The McFarland acknowledges that, job calls for high-purity materi- in their present state, the photo als and methods. cells' light-conversion efficiencies But now, chemical engineering are too low for commercial approfessor Eric W McFarland and plications, but he notes that the graduate student Jing Tang have work demonstrates a new design devised a multilayer photovolta- concept. Now, the group is inic-cell structure in which the pho- vestigating several methods for ton-absorption and charge-sepa- improving performance, such as ration functions occur in distinct boosting surface area and conlayers that can be prepared by rel- centration of dye molecules and atively simple means [Nature, 421, reducing surface reflections.— MITCH JACOBY 616(2003)}.
BRIGHT PROSPECTS FOR SOLAR POWER Novel cell design may lower costs of photovoltaic devices
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NEW DESIGN FOR PHOTO-
voltaic cells may reduce the cost of the expensive devices that convert sunlight into electrical energy. Developed by scientists at the University ofCalifornia, Santa Barbara, the novel architecture may sidestep the need for costly materials and manufacturing methods. In conventional solar cells, a layer of silicon hosts several key processes simultaneously to derive useful electrical energy For example, the semiconductor ab-
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Chemical & Engineering News launches new online service, cen-chemjobs.org
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