British firm develops colourful, transparent solar cells that will add just 10% to glass buildings' cost
by Adam Vaughanguardian.co.uk,
A solar power company capable of "printing" colourful glass that can generate electricity from the sun's energy announced a £2m funding boost on Tuesday.
Oxford Photovoltaics, a spin-off from the University of Oxford, said the investment from clean-tech investors MTI Partners will help its solar glass, which can be dyed almost any colour, take a step closer to the commercial market.
"What
we say here is rather than attach [solar] photovoltaics to the
building, why not make the building the photovoltaics?" Kevin Arthur,
the company's founder and CEO, told the Guardian. "If you decide to
build a building out of glass, then you've already decided to pay for
the glass. If you add this, you're adding a very small extra cost. [The
solar cell treatment] costs no more than 10% of the cost of the facade."
These
generally cost between £600 and £1,000 per square metre, meaning the
new cell treatment wouild cost just £60-£100 extra per square metre.
The
technology works by adding a layer of transparent solid-state solar
cells at most three microns thick to conventional glass, in order to
turn around 12% of the solar energy received into low-carbon
electricity. The power can then be exported to the national grid or used
for the running of a building.
"Within reason we can print
any colour, there's a wide range of dyes, blues and greens and reds and
so on. But different colours have different efficiencies: black is very
high, green is pretty good and red is good, but blue is less good,"
said Arthur.
The £2m investment will pay for equipment and
recruiting staff for the company's new base on the Begbroke Science Park
near Oxford. The company is looking to build a much larger
manufacturing facility next year, with full size panels available for
sampling and trials at the end of 2014. A4-sized samples will be ready
by the end of 2013. While the company is mostly targeting customers
planning new buildings, it also "very interested" in retrofits on the
facades of existing buildings.
Separately, a team at the University of Sheffield and University of Cambridge this week said
they had succeeded in developing a process to 'spray paint' solar cells
on to surfaces and, potentially in the future, roofs and buildings. The
teams believe the process could significantly cut the cost of solar in
the future, but currently only works on "very smooth" surfaces and is
less efficient than conventional solar panels. MORE
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