Breakthrough could lead to stretchy solar panels, creators say

Elastic solar cells could be used to power wearable technology and other devices

Andrew Griffin
Friday 05 January 2024 12:09 EST
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A new breakthrough could help with the creation of stretchable solar cells, the researchers behind it say.

The flexible solar panels could be used to power wearable technology and other similar products, they suggest.

Many existing wearables require regular charging, for which they usually have to be removed, and have limited battery lives. As such, solar cells that could cope with being flexed and strained in use could be a key way of making them easier to use.

Now researchers say that they have found a way to make solar cells that have elasticity while still being able to work efficiently.

They have done so with the creation of a new material that satisfies both of those requirements – which they say has allowed them to create the world’s highest-performing stretchable organic solar cell. That material could also be used in other electronic devices that need to be stretchable or flexed as they are used, the engineers said.

It meets the highest reported level of efficiency for an organic solar cell of this kind, at 19 per cent, but is also 10 times as stretchy as existing devices, they say.

It can be stretched by up to 40 per cent even as it is used, the creators claim.

Solar cells have made their way to some consumer and wearable devices, such as Garmin’s smartwatches. But they are much harder to make in forms that are able to flex, such as implanting them in clothing or other soft products.

The new breakthrough from researchers at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology is reported in a paper, ‘Rigid- and soft-block-copolymerized conjugated polymers enable high-performance intrinsically stretchable organic solar cells’, published in the journal Joule.

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