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Ariel Schwartz

New Silicon Nanorod Solar Cells Use 99% Less Material

by , 02/15/10

The nanorods are assembled into a "carpet" and embedded into a transparent polymer to make flexible solar cells that use only one percent of the material needed to make conventional silicon cells assembled out of wafers.

Instead of investing in solar cell architectures that require entirely new manufacturing processes, wouldn’t it be easiest to build on what we have? That’s part of the thinking behind a new type of silicon nanorod solar cell developed by researchers at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. The nanorods are assembled into a “carpet” and embedded into a transparent polymer to make flexible solar cells that use only 1% of the material needed to make conventional silicon cells.

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One Response to “New Silicon Nanorod Solar Cells Use 99% Less Material”

  1. bpg131313 bpg131313 says:

    I wish them the best of luck on the first actual test of the new system. There wasn’t mention of efficiency, so I’m guessing it’ll be the same as polycrystalline panels. Every advancement helps.

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