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07 Apr, 2016
Finnish Researchers Create Solar Electric Forest with 3D Printed Trees
Renewable Energy & Energy Efficiency | FINLAND | 05 Apr, 2016
Published by : Care To Trade
Solar power technologies are the focus of voluminous research efforts, and now a team of scientists at the VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland Ltd. are developing a prototype 3D printed “tree” which also uses a novel gravure and screen printing process to collect solar energy.
The trees are capable of harvesting solar energy indoors or outdoors, storing it and creating enough electric power to run small devices such as mobile phones and LED lighting.
The VTT Technical Research Centre is the largest multi-technological applied research organization
in Northern Europe and it’s a non-profit part of the Finnish innovation system under the domain of
the Ministry of Employment and the Economy.
This came as a result of a new mass production method which enables designers to create
functional objects from organic solar panels – or OPV, organic photovoltaics – which are sensitive
enough to collect energy from interior lighting or sunlight.
The ultra-thin solar panels are around 0.2 mm thick, and they include electrodes and polymer layers
along with graphics which provide them with visual appeal.
The team at VTT printed the leaf-shaped photovoltaic cells, each of which has a surface area
of 0.0144 square meters and includes connections and the necessary wiring, and they say 200 of
the OPV “leaves” can generate 3.2 amperes of electricity and 10.4 watts of power outdoors in sunnier
climes in a one-square-meter formation.
Flexible, very light, and considerably lower in efficiency than rigid, silicon-based solar panels, the
“leaves” are manufactured using a roll-to-roll method capable of producing up to 100 meters of
layered film per minute.
Each “leaf” is affordable and consumes very little raw material. Once the working life of the leaves
– likely a few years – is over, the OPV panels can be recycled.
VTT is also developing roll-to-roll manufacturing methods which use inorganic perovskite solar
panels which may well open new applications for printable solar cells. The research work with Image 4methylammonium lead tri-iodide, derived from the crystal perovskites, offers a great deal of promise
as well. Materials scientist Yang Yang at the University of California, Los Angeles, has built a solar
collection cell from it which achieved more than 19% efficiency. That output rivals crystalline silicon
solar cells which can currently achieve 17-23% efficiency.
“I don’t know any group that works on photovoltaics that isn’t looking at perovskites,” says Henry Snaith, a physicist at the University of Oxford.
The “leaves” of the tree, attached to 3D printed “trunks” made of a wood-based biomaterial also
developed at VTT, are flexible and patterned to form an electronic system complete with wiring channels
that conduct energy to a converter system.
More articles about 3D printing ? Go 3Dprinting.com