
UCLA engineering professor
Yang Yang holds his plastic solar cell (left) and
a traditional silicon solar cell (right). Photo credit:
MISA/misaphoto.com
Engineers Pioneer Affordable
Alternative Energy Resource
— Solar Energy Cells Made of Everyday Plastic
With oil and gas prices in the United
States hovering at an all-time high, interest in renewable energy
alternatives is again heating up. Researchers at the UCLA Henry
Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science hope to meet
the growing demand with a new and more affordable way to harness
the sun’s rays: using solar cell panels made out of everyday
plastics.
In research published today in Nature Materials
magazine, UCLA engineering professor Yang Yang, postdoctoral researcher
Gang Li and graduate student Vishal Shrotriya showcase their work
on an innovative new plastic (or polymer) solar cell they hope
eventually can be produced at a mere 10 percent to 20 percent
of the current cost of traditional cells, making the technology
more widely available.
“Solar energy is a clean alternative energy
source. It’s clear, given the current energy crisis, that
we need to embrace new sources of renewable energy that are good
for our planet. I believe very strongly in using technology to
provide affordable options that all consumers can put into practice,”
Yang said.

A traditional silicon solar cell (left) and the
new plastic solar cell created at UCLA.
Photo credit: MISA/misaphoto.com
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The price for quality traditional solar modules
typically is around three to four times more expensive than fossil
fuel. While prices have dropped since the early 1980s, the solar
module itself still represents nearly half of the total installed
cost of a traditional solar energy system.
Currently, nearly 90 percent of solar cells in
the world are made from a refined, highly purified form of silicon
— the same material used in manufacturing integrated circuits
and computer chips. High demand from the computer industry has
sharply reduced the availability of quality silicon, resulting
in prohibitively high costs that rule out solar energy as an option
for the average consumer.
Made of a single layer of plastic sandwiched between two conductive
electrodes, UCLA’s solar cell is easy to mass-produce and
costs much less to make — roughly one-third of the cost
of traditional silicon solar technology. The polymers used in
its construction are commercially available in such large quantities
that Yang hopes cost-conscious consumers worldwide will quickly
adopt the technology.
Independent tests on the UCLA solar cell already
have received high marks. The nation’s only authoritative
certification organization for solar technology, the National
Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), located in Golden, Colo.,
has helped the UCLA team ensure the accuracy of their efficiency
numbers. The efficiency of the cell is the percentage of energy
the solar cell gathers from the total amount of energy, or sunshine,
that actually hits it.
According to Yang, the 4.4 percent efficiency
achieved by UCLA is the highest number yet published for plastic
solar cells.
“As in any research, achieving precise efficiency
benchmarks is a critical step,” Yang said. “Particularly
in this kind of research, where reported efficiency numbers can
vary so widely, we’re grateful to the NREL for assisting
us in confirming the accuracy of our work.”
Given the strides the team already has made with
the technology, Yang calculates he will be able to double the
efficiency percentage in a very short period of time. The target
for polymer solar cell performance is ultimately about 15 percent
to 20 percent efficiency, with a 15–20 year lifespan. Large-sized
silicon modules with the same lifespan typically have a 14 percent
to 18 percent efficiency rating.
The plastic solar cell is still a few years away
from being available to consumers, but the UCLA team is working
diligently to get it to market.
“We hope that ultimately solar energy can
be extensively used in the commercial sector as well as the private
sector. Imagine solar cells installed in cars to absorb solar
energy to replace the traditional use of diesel and gas. People
will vie to park their cars on the top level of parking garages
so their cars can be charged under sunlight. Using the same principle,
cell phones can also be charged by solar energy,” Yang said.
“There are such a wide variety of applications.”
For more information, media should contact Melissa
Abraham at 310.206.0540, or via email at mabraham@support.ucla.edu.
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