By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
ScienceabodeScienceabode
  • Home
  • News & Perspective
    News & PerspectiveShow More
    Microorganism that causes rare but severe eye infections detected in NSW coastal areas
    By Admin
    Scientists identify common cause of gastro in young children and adults over 50 years old
    By admin
    AI reveals hidden traits about our planet’s flora to help save species
    By admin
    Eye drops slow nearsightedness progression in kids, study finds
    By admin
    Using AI to create better, more potent medicines
    By admin
  • Latest News
    Latest NewsShow More
    Researchers develop new robot medics for places doctors are unable to be
    By Admin
    Even thinking about marriage gets young people to straighten up
    By admin
    Study: People tend to locate the self in the brain or the heart – and it affects their judgments and decisions
    By admin
    UCLA patient is first to receive successful heart transplant after using experimental 50cc Total Artificial Heart
    By admin
    Via Dying Cells, UVA Finds Potential Way to Control Cholesterol Levels
    By admin
  • Health
    Health
    The World Health Organization defines health as “a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.”…
    Show More
    Top News
    Tiny magnetic discs offer remote brain stimulation without transgenes
    October 18, 2024
    World’s largest study of brain volume reveals genetic links to ADHD, Parkinson’s Disease 
    October 26, 2024
    Hoarding disorder: ‘sensory CBT’ treatment strategy shows promise
    October 18, 2024
    Latest News
    How do therapy dogs help domestic abuse survivors receiving support services?
    May 10, 2025
    New chronic pain therapy retrains the brain to process emotions
    May 10, 2025
    Mind Blank? Here’s What Your Brain Is Really Doing During Those Empty Moments
    May 7, 2025
    A Common Diabetes Drug Might Be the Secret to Relieving Knee Pain Without Surgery!
    April 28, 2025
  • Environment
    EnvironmentShow More
    Arsenic exposure linked to faster onset of diabetes in south Texas population 
    By Admin
    Antarctica vulnerable to invasive species hitching rides on plastic and organic debris
    By Admin
    New substrate material for flexible electronics could help combat e-waste
    By Admin
    Bacteria ‘nanowires’ could help scientists develop green electronics
    By Admin
    Replacing plastics with alternatives is worse for greenhouse gas emissions in most cases, study finds
    By Admin
  • Infomation
    • Pricavy Policy
    • Terms of Service
  • Jobs
  • Application Submission
Notification Show More
Aa
ScienceabodeScienceabode
Aa
  • Home
  • Health
  • Anatomy
  • Jobs Portal
  • Application Submission
  • Categories
    • Health
    • Anatomy
    • Food & Diet
    • Beauty Lab
    • News & Perspective
    • Environment
  • More Foxiz
    • Blog Index
    • Sitemap
Follow US
Scienceabode > Blog > Uncategorized > Tweaks Behind the Rebirth of Nearly Discarded Organic Solar Technologies
Uncategorized

Tweaks Behind the Rebirth of Nearly Discarded Organic Solar Technologies

admin
Last updated: 2019/12/30 at 11:36 PM
By admin
Share
7 Min Read
SHARE

A solar energy material that is remarkably durable and affordable is regrettably also unusable if it barely generates electricity, thus many researchers had abandoned emerging organic solar technologies. But lately, a shift in the underlying chemistry has boosted power output, and a new study has revealed counterintuitive tweaks making the new chemistry successful.

—————————————————————————————————————————————–

Find jobs in R & D, Medicine, engineering and a wide variety of scientific fields and others in our jobs page.

- Advertisement -
MedBanner_Skyscraper_160x600_03/2018

—————————————————————————————————————————————–

Explore resources for science students engaged in life science courses and other scientific fields with practice tests, mcqs at our Student Zone.

—————————————————————————————————————————

The shift is from “fullerene” to “non-fullerene acceptors” (NFAs), terms detailed below, and in photovoltaic electricity generation, the acceptor is a molecule with the potential to be to electrons what a catcher is to a baseball. Corresponding donor molecules “pitch” electrons to acceptor “catchers” to create electric current. Highly cited chemist Jean-Luc Brédas at the Georgia Institute of Technology has furthered the technology and also led the new study.

“NFAs are complex beasts and do things that current silicon solar technology does not. You can shape them, make them semi-transparent or colored. But their big potential is in the possibility of fine-tuning how they free up and move electrons to generate electricity,” said Brédas, a Regents Professor in Georgia Tech’s School of Chemistry and Biochemistry.

Gaining on silicon

In just the last four years, tuning NFA chemistry has boosted organic photovoltaic technology from initially converting only 1% of sunlight into electricity to 18% conversion in recent experiments. By comparison, high-quality silicon solar modules already on the market convert about 20%.

“Theory says we should be able to reach over 25% conversion with organic NFA-based solar if we can control energy loss by way of the morphology,” said Tonghui Wang, a postdoctoral researcher in Brédas’ lab and first author of the study.

Morphology, the shapes molecules take in a material, is key to NFA solar technology’s heightened efficiency, but how that works on the molecular level has been a mystery. The new study carefully modeled tiny tweaks to molecular shapes and calculated corresponding energy conversion in a common NFA electron donor/acceptor pairing.

Improved performance came not from tweaks to the metaphorical hand of the catcher nor from the donor’s pitching hand but from something akin to positions of the catcher’s feet. Some positions better aligned the “body” of the acceptor with that of the electron donor.

The “feet” were a tiny component, a methoxy group, on the acceptor, and two positions out of four possible positions it took boosted the conversion of light into electricity from 6% to 12%. Brédas and Wang published their study, Organic Solar Cells Based on Non-Fullerene Small Molecule Acceptors: Impact of Substituent Position, on November 20, 2019, in the journal Matter. The research was funded by the Office of Naval Research.

(The donor/acceptor chemical pair was PBDB-T / IT-OM-1, -2, -3, or -4, with -2 and -3 showing superior electricity generation. )

Clunky silicon cells

Marketable NFA-based solar cells could have many advantages over silicon, which requires mining quartz gravel, smelting it like iron, purifying it like steel, then cutting and machining it. By contrast, organic solar cells start as inexpensive solvents that can be printed onto surfaces.

Silicon cells are usually stiff and heavy and weaken with heat and light stress, whereas NFA-based solar cells are light, flexible, and stress-resistant. They also have more complex photoelectric properties. In NFA-based photoactive layers, when photons excite electrons out of the outer orbits of donor molecules, the electrons dance around the electron holes they have created, setting them up for a customized handoff to acceptors.

“Silicon pops an electron out of orbit when photons excite it past a threshold. It’s on or off; you either get a conduction electron or no conduction electron,” said Brédas, who is also Vasser Woolley Chair in Molecular Design at Georgia Tech. “NFAs are subtler. An electron donor reaches out an electron, and the electron acceptor tugs it away. The ability to adjust morphology makes the electron handoff tunable.”

Not a fullerene

Like the name says, non-fullerene acceptors are not fullerenes, which are pure carbon molecules with rather uniform and geometric structures of repeating pentagonal or hexagonal elements. Nanotubes, graphene, and soot are examples of fullerenes, which are named after architect Buckminster Fuller, who was famous for designing geodesic domes.

Fullerenes are more ridged in molecular structure and tunability than non-fullerenes, which are more freely designed to be floppy and bendable. NFA-based donors and acceptors can wrap around each other like precise swirls of chocolate and vanilla batter in a Bundt cake, giving them advantages beyond electron donating and accepting – such as better molecular packing in a material.

“Another point is how the acceptor molecules are connected to each other so that the accepted electron has a conductive path to an electrode,” Brédas said. “And it goes for the donors, too.”

As in any solar cell, conduction electrons need a way out of the photovoltaic material into an electrode, and there has to be a return path to the opposite electrode for arriving electrons to fill holes that departing electrons left behind.

Highly impactful citations

Brédas’ accolades are numerous, but he has particularly gained attention for his Google Scholar h-index score, a calculation of the impact of a researcher’s publications. Breda’s current score of 146 likely places him in the 700 most-impactful published researchers in modern global history.

He has been a particularly noted leader in photoelectric and semiconductor research based on affordable and practical organic chemistry.

Source: Georgia Institute of Technology.

Published on December 30, 2019

admin December 30, 2019 December 30, 2019
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Print

Fast Four Quiz: Precision Medicine in Cancer

How much do you know about precision medicine in cancer? Test your knowledge with this quick quiz.
Get Started
Even in Winter, Life Persists in Arctic Seas

(USCGC Healy breaking through the Bering Sea waves. Credit: Chantelle Rose/NSF)   Despite…

A Biodiversity Discovery That Was Waiting in the Wings–Wasp Wings, That Is

Wing size differences between two Nasonia wasp species are the result of…

Entertainement

Coming soon

Your one-stop resource for medical news and education.

Your one-stop resource for medical news and education.
Sign Up for Free

You Might Also Like

Uncategorized

Microorganism that causes rare but severe eye infections detected in NSW coastal areas

By Admin
Uncategorized

Scientists identify common cause of gastro in young children and adults over 50 years old

By admin
Uncategorized

AI reveals hidden traits about our planet’s flora to help save species

By admin
Uncategorized

Eye drops slow nearsightedness progression in kids, study finds

By admin
Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram
Company
  • Privacy Policy
  • Editorial Policy
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Contact US
  • Feedback
  • Advertisement
More Info
  • Newsletter
  • Beauty Lab
  • News & Perspective
  • Food & Diet
  • Health
  • Environment
  • Anatomy

Sign Up For Free

Subscribe to our newsletter and don't miss out on our programs, webinars and trainings.

Copyright © 2023 ScienceAbode. All Rights Reserved. Designed and Developed by Spirelab Solutions (Pvt) Ltd

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?