Flexible Electronics News

NREL, German Solar Energy Researchers to Work Together

Scientists from the two nations to collaborate on next-generation PV and fuels

Author Image

By: DAVID SAVASTANO

Contributing Editor, Coatings World and Ink World

German and American researchers will work together more closely on solar energy topics as a result of the signing of a memo of understanding (MOU) between the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and the German Helmholtz Association. The MOU identifies several key solar energy topics to explore for joint research cooperation.

Scientists from the two countries, among other endeavors, will cooperate to synthesize and characterize novel materials that are candidates for more efficient solar cells and solar fuels.

They’ll also develop and use fast imaging techniques to help characterize thin-film materials on the micrometer to nanometer scale, and to characterize in situ growth processes.

They’ll seek a fundamental understanding of grain boundary/interface passivation in thin-film silicon and search for the potential and limits of wide band-gap thin-film solar cells. Thin films, made of copper, indium, gallium, selenium and other emerging materials, could potentially replace silicon as the most efficient materials in next-generation thin-film solar arrays.

To measure performance and reliability of solar cells and modules, the scientists will use electroluminescence, photoluminescence and thermography. They will also investigate the stability of solar cells by subjecting them to high temperatures and light exposures.

New device structures and lower cost catalysts will also be investigated for the generation of hydrogen in photocatalytic solar fuel generation.

The MOU was signed in Berlin by NREL Director Dan Arvizu, and leaders of three research institutes within the German Helmholtz Association – the Research Center Jülich (FZ Jülich), the Helmholtz Center Berlin (HZB), and the German Aerospace Center (DLR),

“This agreement promises to advance the state of knowledge and the development of new materials and technologies that will form the basis of next-generation solar cells and solar fuels,” Arvizu said.

Keep Up With Our Content. Subscribe To Ink World magazine Newsletters