Big beats bolster solar cell efficiency Image: University of Salford Some interesting news on t
Big beats bolster solar cell efficiencyImage: University of SalfordSome interesting news on the solar front! Research at the Queen Mary University of London and Imperial College London have found that the high frequencies and pitch associated with rock and pop music improves solar cell performance. Solar cells containing “nanorods” were to found to have increased efficiencies of up to 40% due to the music-caused vibrations.The study has implications for improving energy generation from sunlight, particularly for the development of new, lower cost, printed solar cells.The researchers grew billions of tiny rods (nanorods) made from zinc oxide, then covered them with an active polymer to form a device that converts sunlight into electricity.Using the special properties of the zinc oxide material, the team was able to show that sound levels as low as 75 decibels (equivalent to a typical roadside noise or a printer in an office) could significantly improve the solar cell performance.“After investigating systems for converting vibrations into electricity this is a really exciting development that shows a similar set of physical properties can also enhance the performance of a photovoltaic,” said Dr Steve Dunn, Reader in Nanoscale Materials from Queen Mary’s School of Engineering and Materials Science.Scientists had previously shown that applying pressure or strain to zinc oxide materials could result in voltage outputs, known as the piezoelectric effect. However, the effect of these piezoelectric voltages on solar cell efficiency had not received significant attention before.“We thought the soundwaves, which produce random fluctuations, would cancel each other out and so didn’t expect to see any significant overall effect on the power output,” said James Durrant, Professor of Photochemistry at Imperial College London, who co-led the study.“The key for us was that not only that the random fluctuations from the sound didn’t cancel each other out, but also that some frequencies of sound seemed really to amplify the solar cell output - so that the increase in power was a remarkably big effect considering how little sound energy we put in.”“We tried playing music instead of dull flat sounds, as this helped us explore the effect of different pitches. The biggest difference we found was when we played pop music rather than classical, which we now realise is because our acoustic solar cells respond best to the higher pitched sounds present in pop music,” he concluded.The discovery could be used to power devices that are exposed to acoustic vibrations, such as air conditioning units or within cars and other vehicles.Dr Dunn added: “The work highlights the benefits of collaboration to develop new and interesting systems and scientific understanding.”Source | The PaperFurther reading:Low-Priced Plastic PhotovoltaicsScientists develop heat-resistant materials that could vastly improve solar cell efficiencyWorld Record Solar Cell with 44.7% EfficiencySelf-Healing Solar Cells ‘Channel’ Natural ProcessesUCLA researchers double efficiency of novel solar cellDye-sensitized solar cells rival conventional cell efficiency -- source link
#science#energy#solar power#environment#scinerds post