GE
Global Research, the centralized research organization of the
General Electric Company, announced that scientists on their Nano
Photovoltaics (PV) team have demonstrated a scalable silicon
nanowire-based solar cell, which has the potential to achieve up to 18%
efficiency and be produced at a dramatically lower cost than
conventional solar cells. This demonstration represents a promising
development in the effort to make PV systems more economically viable
for consumers.
GE reported its development recently in the journal Applied
Physics Letters, which can be accessed online at http://scitation.aip.org/journals/doc/APPLAB-ft/vol_91/iss_23/
233117_1.html. The paper also was featured in the Virtual
Journal of Nanoscale Science & Technology, http://scitation.aip.org/dbt/dbt.jsp?KEY=VIRT01&Volume=16&Issue=26
&type=ALERT, which highlights the latest research in
nanotechnology from various science journals. (Long URLs in this
release may need to be copied/pasted into your Internet browser's
address field. Remove the extra space if one exists.)
“GE’s demonstration of the silicon
nanowire-based cell represents a significant breakthrough in our
efforts to enable higher efficiency cells that can be produced at much
lower production costs,” said Dr. Loucas Tsakalakos, Project
Leader of GE’s Nano PV team. “Today, higher
efficiency often comes with a higher price tag. Through the unique
processing and materials property benefits enabled by nanotechnology,
we’re aiming to break that paradigm and pave the way to
making solar power more affordable for consumers while maintaining and
even improving cell performance.”
Increasing the affordability and availability of solar power
is a key part of GE’s ecomagination initiative. Ecomagination
represents the company’s commitment to develop cleaner
technology and product solutions to address the world’s
toughest environmental and energy challenges. GE has committed to more
than doubling its level of investment in environmentally friendly
technologies like solar from $700 million to $1.5 billion by the year
2010. GE is well on track to meet its commitment, surpassing the $1
billion mark in R+D spending this year.
GE Energy markets and sells solar electric power systems for
residential, commercial and industrial applications. GE’s
Global Research Center is actively engaged in developing cutting-edge
technologies that will advance the Company’s product
portfolio. The work published in Applied Physics Letters was a result
of collaboration between researchers at GE Global Research and GE
Energy-Solar Technologies.
GE’s solar research program is unique in that it
involves a comprehensive examination across the entire solar industry
value chain to enable technology solutions that will make solar power
more affordable and available in the U.S. and around the world. The
program has a balanced mix of short and long-term technology
initiatives to achieve its goals.
The research effort by Dr. Tsakalakos and the Nano PV team,
which included Joleyn Balch, Jody Fronheiser, and Dr. Bas Korevaar from
GE Global Research, as well as Dr. Oleg Sulima and Dr. Jim Rand from GE
Energy-Solar Technologies, represents some of the farthest reaching
activities of GE’s comprehensive solar research program. GE
has an ongoing collaboration with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
as part of the agency’s Solar America Initiative that is
focused on more near-term low-cost PV solutions. GE is managing a
three-year, $46.7 million project that is looking across the entire
value chain to make solar energy more cost effective and more readily
available in the marketplace. The program is evaluating three different
technologies for the solar cell: high efficiency silicon-based cells,
molded silicon wafers, and flexible thin films. DOE’s Solar
America Initiative is designed to make solar energy cost-competitive
with conventional forms of electricity by 2015.
Beyond this program, GE researchers are working on
technologies to convert solar energy into usable power that can be
supplied to a house, building or to the electrical grid. As renewables
like solar and wind achieve a higher penetration into the grid, new
technologies will be needed to smooth their transition.
Posted 17th January 2008