It is noted that about 90 percent of solar
cells installed today on rooftops and in panel arrays are based on silicon. But
several factors limit the material's use. It's expensive and doesn't absorb
sunlight strongly, so a relatively thick and brittle layer is needed. These
traits make it rigid and heavy, and limit its applications.
To overcome these limitations, scientists are making lower-cost and more flexible alternatives. Emerging solar technologies include dye-sensitized solar cells, organic photovoltaics, quantum dot cells and perovskite cells. Most of these developments can't yet match silicon in its efficiency at converting light energy to electrical output, but some companies expect that their lower costs could more than make up for the difference. Perovskite photovoltaics are the closest so far to rivaling silicon's efficiency. But scientists would need to overcome additional technical challenges before scaling up and giving silicon a run for its money.
Tags : solar cells   silicon   lower-cost