Sunday, October 05, 2008

Make Solar Panels in your Pizza Oven

The reason why traditional power sources (line electric, gasoline engines, etc.) hold on is because of their cheap cost in comparison to "alternative" energy methods. Over the course of 5 years, consumption via solar-power will always be more expensive than line-power. What there were a way to bring that cost down for solar electric power? Look Down Under. An Australian scientist has developed a new method of manufacturing solar cells using nothing more than some nail polish remover, a pizza oven and a standard inkjet printer.

The iJET technique is so easy and cheap to carry out that it could revolutionize access to solar technology in the developing world.

In a recent radio interview (audio), Nicole Kuepper, a 23 year-old PhD student at the University of New South Wales, explained the process.

Firstly, she takes a standard silicon solar cell and sprays it with a substance similar to nail polish. Then, she inkjet prints something like nail polish remover onto the wafer in a set pattern in the same way that you’d print a normal photo. This enables the creation of high-resolution patterns on the cell at a very low cost. The cell is then metallized with an aluminum spray and baked at a very low temperature of around 550 fahrenheit in “something like a pizza oven.”

Kuepper went on to explain how solar cells are currently manufactured using expensive “high-tech, high-cleanliness equipment,” too costly for many countries in the developing world, adding, “we’re trying to do away with all of that so that so we can ensure that these solar cells can actually be manufactured in a developing country’s environment that you might find in say Ghana or Laos for example.”

(from Clean Technica)

1 comment:

Lord Douglias said...

I have read several internet blogs on the Pizza Oven/Injet printer solar cells and heard an NPR radio interview of the young Australian woman inventor who actually stumbled brilliantly upon the process by accident. The point that seems to missed in all these conversations is that while the stated goal of making solar energy feasible in poor developing countries is a wonderful thing, have you heard perhaps that there is a worldwide energy/environmental/financial crisis right now?! Making solar panels cheaply could have a huge impact on all three and even on the survival of humans on Earth. Frankly, It does not sound like producing these panels is rocket science and the world cannot wait as the inventor states five years for their "commercial development". If they work -start making them now!