PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Antifreeze, cheap materials may lead to low-cost solar energy

2013-07-04
(Press-News.org) CORVALLIS, Ore. – A process combining some comparatively cheap materials and the same antifreeze that keeps an automobile radiator from freezing in cold weather may be the key to making solar cells that cost less and avoid toxic compounds, while further expanding the use of solar energy.

And when perfected, this approach might also cook up the solar cells in a microwave oven similar to the one in most kitchens.

Engineers at Oregon State University have determined that ethylene glycol, commonly used in antifreeze products, can be a low-cost solvent that functions well in a "continuous flow" reactor – an approach to making thin-film solar cells that is easily scaled up for mass production at industrial levels.

The research, just published in Material Letters, a professional journal, also concluded this approach will work with CZTS, or copper zinc tin sulfide, a compound of significant interest for solar cells due to its excellent optical properties and the fact these materials are cheap and environmentally benign.

"The global use of solar energy may be held back if the materials we use to produce solar cells are too expensive or require the use of toxic chemicals in production," said Greg Herman, an associate professor in the OSU School of Chemical, Biological and Environmental Engineering. "We need technologies that use abundant, inexpensive materials, preferably ones that can be mined in the U.S. This process offers that."

By contrast, many solar cells today are made with CIGS, or copper indium gallium diselenide. Indium is comparatively rare and costly, and mostly produced in China. Last year, the prices of indium and gallium used in CIGS solar cells were about 275 times higher than the zinc used in CZTS cells.

The technology being developed at OSU uses ethylene glycol in meso-fluidic reactors that can offer precise control of temperature, reaction time, and mass transport to yield better crystalline quality and high uniformity of the nanoparticles that comprise the solar cell – all factors which improve quality control and performance.

This approach is also faster – many companies still use "batch mode" synthesis to produce CIGS nanoparticles, a process that can ultimately take up to a full day, compared to about half an hour with a continuous flow reactor. The additional speed of such reactors will further reduce final costs.

"For large-scale industrial production, all of these factors – cost of materials, speed, quality control – can translate into money," Herman said. "The approach we're using should provide high-quality solar cells at a lower cost."

The performance of CZTS cells right now is lower than that of CIGS, researchers say, but with further research on the use of dopants and additional optimization it should be possible to create solar cell efficiency that is comparable.



INFORMATION:



This project is one result of work through the Center for Sustainable Materials Chemistry, a collaborative effort of OSU and five other academic institutions, supported by the National Science Foundation. Funding was provided by Sharp Laboratories of America. The goal is to develop materials and products that are safe, affordable and avoid the use of toxic chemicals or expensive compounds.

Editor's Note: A digital image of solar nanoparticles is available online: http://bit.ly/15g77Y1

The study this story is based on is available in ScholarsArchive@OSU; http://bit.ly/10Zj0SK



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Fossil insect traces reveal ancient climate, entrapment, and fossilization at La Brea Tar Pits

2013-07-04
LOS ANGELES — The La Brea Tar Pits have stirred the imaginations of scientists and the public alike for over a century. But the amount of time it took for ancient animals to become buried in asphalt after enduring their gruesome deaths has remained a mystery. Recent forensic investigations, led by Anna R. Holden of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County (NHM) and colleagues, reveal new insights into fossilization and the prevailing climate at the Rancho La Brea Tar Pits toward the end of the last Ice Age. The paper, entitled "Paleoecological and taphonomic implications ...

White dwarf star throws light on possible variability of a constant of Nature

2013-07-04
SYDNEY: An international team led by the University of New South Wales has studied a distant star where gravity is more than 30,000 times greater than on Earth to test its controversial theory that one of the constants of Nature is not a constant. Dr Julian Berengut and his colleagues used the Hubble Space Telescope to measure the strength of the electromagnetic force – known as alpha – on a white dwarf star. Their results, which do not contradict the variable constant theory, are to be published in the journal Physical Review Letters. Dr Berengut, of the UNSW School ...

Happily married means a healthier ever after

2013-07-03
New BYU research finds that people in happy marriages live less "in sickness" but enjoy more of life "in health." In a 20-year longitudinal study tracking health and marriage quality, BYU family life researcher Rick Miller found that as the quality of marriage holds up over the years, physical health holds up too. "There's evidence from previous research that marital conflict leads to poor health," Miller said. "But this study also shows happy marriages have a preventative component that keeps you in good health over the years." A previous BYU study caught national ...

UCLA researchers find new clue to cause of human narcolepsy

2013-07-03
In 2000, researchers at the UCLA Center for Sleep Research published findings showing that people suffering from narcolepsy, a disorder characterized by uncontrollable periods of deep sleep, had 90 percent fewer neurons containing the neuropeptide hypocretin in their brains than healthy people. The study was the first to show a possible biological cause of the disorder. Subsequent work by this group and others demonstrated that hypocretin is an arousing chemical that keeps us awake and elevates both mood and alertness; the death of hypocretin cells, the researchers ...

Growth, not just size, boosts brain aneurysms' risk of bursting

2013-07-03
Brain aneurysms of all sizes — even small ones the size of a pea — are up to 12 times more likely to rupture if they are growing, according to a new UCLA study. Published July 2 in the online edition of the journal Radiology, the discovery counters current guidelines suggesting that small aneurysms pose a low risk for rupture, and it emphasizes the need for regular monitoring and earlier treatment. "Until now, we believed that large aneurysms presented the highest risk for rupture and that smaller aneurysms may not require monitoring," said lead author Dr. J. Pablo ...

Novel chemistry for new class of antibiotic

2013-07-03
University of Adelaide research has produced a potential new antibiotic which could help in the battle against bacterial resistance to antibiotics. The potential new antibiotic targets a bacterial enzyme critical to metabolic processes. The compound is a protein inhibitor which binds to the enzyme (called biotin protein ligase), stopping its action and interrupting the life cycle of the bacteria. "Existing antibiotics target the bacterial cell membranes but this potential new antibiotic operates in a completely different way," says Professor Andrew Abell, project ...

Scientists decode the genomic sequence of 700,000-year-old horse

2013-07-03
July 3, 2013, Shenzhen, China – The international team, which included researchers from University of Copenhagen, BGI and other institutes, has successfully sequenced and analyzed the short pieces of DNA preserved in bone-remnants from a horse frozen for the last 700,000 years in the permafrost of Yukon, Canada. This is the oldest genome reported so far, which is ten times as old as the ancient Denisovan genome reported in last year. The work here laid a solid foundation for researchers to further decode other extinct species and clarify biology evolution. The Thistle ...

Shape-shifting disease proteins may explain variable appearance of neurodegenerative diseases

2013-07-03
PHILADELPHIA - Neurodegenerative diseases are not all alike. Two individuals suffering from the same disease may experience very different age of onset, symptoms, severity, and constellation of impairments, as well as different rates of disease progression. Researchers in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania have shown one disease protein can morph into different strains and promote misfolding of other disease proteins commonly found in Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and other related neurodegenerative diseases. Virginia M.Y. Lee, PhD, MBA, professor ...

First supper is a life changer for lizards

2013-07-03
For young lizards born into this unpredictable world, their very first meal can be a major life changer. So say researchers who report evidence on July 3 in Current Biology, a Cell Press publication, that this early detail influences how the lizards disperse from their birthplaces, how they grow, and whether they survive. A quick or slow meal even influences the lizards' reproductive success two years later in a surprising way. The findings demonstrate something very important: fleeting moments in time really can change the lives of individuals and the evolutionary paths ...

DNA markers in low-IQ autism suggest heredity

2013-07-03
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Researchers are striving to understand the different genetic structures that underlie at least a subset of autism spectrum disorders. In cases where the genetic code is in error, did that happen anew in the patient, perhaps through mutation or copying error, or was it inherited? A new study in the American Journal of Human Genetics finds evidence that there may often be a recessive, inherited genetic contribution in autism with significant intellectual disability. The authors also make predictions in the study regarding how far back ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Female bonobos keep males in check—not with strength, but with solidarity

What happens in the brain when your mind blanks

The oldest ant ever discovered found fossilized in Brazil

Health care cost concerns and hardships for families of children with disabilities

Trends in mental health diagnoses among publicly insured children

Measles may be making a comeback in the US, Stanford Medicine-led research finds

We still have a representation problem for women in physics – and Canada is no exception

Even light exercise could help slow cognitive decline in people at risk of Alzheimer’s

Prostate cancer discovery opens door to more tailored treatments

The potential oncogenic role of serum-derived hsa_circ_101555 as a non-invasive diagnostic/prognostic marker in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma

Use of traditional Chinese medicine in Chinese patients with cancer receiving outpatient care: primary reasons and communication with oncologists

Largest imaging spectro-polarimeter achieves first light at the NSF Daniel K. Inouye solar telescope

The heart of world’s largest solar telescope begins to beat

Society for cardiovascular angiography & interventions scientific sessions 2025 features latest clinical innovations in cardiology care

Tumor microenvironment dynamics: the regulatory influence of long non-coding RNAs

Research update: Plant-based calamari that rivals real seafood in texture

Rethinking stroke risk in patients with atherosclerotic carotid stenosis

New approach makes AI adaptable for computer vision in crop breeding

Moffitt Cancer Center launches new podcast, The ImmunoVerse, hosted by CEO Dr. Patrick Hwu

Evidence blasted into space: Mystery why some meteorites look less shocked solved

Immune system warriors predict the future of autoimmune blood vessel disease

Canadian experts urge protection for children from escalating heat in schools and child care settings

Awkward. Humans are still better than AI at reading the room

No more copy-pasting: DNA base editing for better Lactobacillus strains

AI provides reliable answers with less computational overhead

‘System rife with blame’ could threaten parents’ mental health when their kids struggle with school attendance

Nature positive: lots of rhetoric, little reality

Breakthrough approach for diagnosing TB could significantly improve detection

New era of aid cuts and conflict threatens educational lifeline of youngest learners

World Hormone Day 2025 – global endocrine community unites to raise public awareness of the small steps everyone can take towards good hormone health

[Press-News.org] Antifreeze, cheap materials may lead to low-cost solar energy