UW researchers boost efficiency of polymer solar cells using self-assembled nanowires A team of researchers led by Samson A. Jenekhe, UW professor of chemical engineering and chemistry, boosted the efficiency of organic solar cells by using self-assembled polymer nanowires that help to convert sunlight into electrical energy. Their work was featured on the Journal of American Chemistry Society's Web site. Click here to read the full article. “Because current organic solar cells lag behind silicon photovoltaics in power conversion efficiency,” said Jenekhe, “a major focus of researchers is to improve the efficiency of organic photovoltaics to close this gap in performance.” Researchers prepared the polymer nanowires by solution-phase self-assembly, slowly cooling a hot solution to room temperature in a dark environment. Although polymer solar cells have been made and studied for a long time, Jenekhe said using self-assembly “brings a new dimension with enormous potential to transform the design, fabrication, and performance of solar cells.” The challenge that scientists face is how to precisely control the size, shape, and make-up of the component materials used to fabricate polymer solar cells. “Self-assembly automatically does the process and quality control in bringing materials together for constructing a solar cell,” Jenekhe said. The self-assembled nanowires perform multiple functions. First, they absorb the sunlight or photons. Second, their large surface area enables more efficient conversion of the absorbed photons from sunlight into charges or electrical current. Third, they serve as the conduit for moving the charges produced to external collecting electrodes. Jenekhe’s team used the material poly(3-butylthiophene) to build the polymer solar cells, which are pushing beyond the 3.5 -percent power conversion efficiency as their work continues. This rivals the power conversion efficiency of the material poly(3-hexylthiophene), which has been the focus of most research effort on polymer solar cells so far. “One of the attractive aspects of the nanowire approach is that we are not limited to using one specific polymer,” Jenekhe said. “We have already constructed solar cells from nanowires of other polymers that are also more efficient than poly(3-hexylthiophene).” Jenekhe’s research team included Hao Xin, chemical engineering postdoctoral research associate, Guoqiang Ren, chemical engineering graduate student, and Felix Sunjoo Kim, chemical engineering graduate student. Their work was featured in the April 23, 2008 issue of the Journal of the American chemical Society (volume 130, page 5424). |

