News Release

UD's Institute of Energy Conversion in involved in DARPA project to develop 'extreme' solar cells

Business Announcement

University of Delaware

University of Delaware Institute of Energy Conversion to Help Develop 'Extreme' Solar Cells

image: The University of Delaware's Institute of Energy Conversion is a University Center of Excellence for Photovoltaic Research and Education, designated by the US Department of Energy and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in 1992. view more 

Credit: University of Delaware

The University of Delaware Institute of Energy Conversion (IEC) is part of an industry-academic team that has been awarded $3.8 million from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the research and development office of the U.S. Department of Defense, to demonstrate solar cells that can stand up to battle conditions and environmental extremes.

The research program, "Flexible High-performance Tandem-junction PV Array," under DARPA's Low-Cost Lightweight Portable Photovoltaics (PoP) solicitation, is led by Ascent Solar Technologies, Inc. Headquartered in Thornton, Colo., the company is a developer of flexible thin-film solar modules and identified as ASTI on the NASDAQ.

The funding level for UD's IEC is $647,649 for the initial 18 months of the three-phase program. The entire program is anticipated to continue over the next 54 months.

"The significance of the Low-Cost Lightweight Portable Photovoltaics (PoP) is that it will take thin-film, flexible copper-indium-deselenide based solar cells to the next level of performance in order to meet DARPA's requirements and will accelerate the implementation of thin-film flexible solar cells to commercial and residential markets," said Robert Birkmire, IEC director.

"IEC has been at the forefront of flexible copper-indium-deselinide based solar cells on a plastic substrate for over 20 years and has developed much of the technology that is currently being commercialized," Birkmire noted.

The goal of PoP is to demonstrate low-cost, lightweight phovoltaics (PV) that can not only weather battle conditions and environmental extremes, but also deliver a power conversion efficiency of 20 percent or greater by the end of the program.

The University of Delaware Institute of Energy Conversion is the sole academic partner on the project. The industrial partners include ITN Energy Systems of Littleton, Colo.; Cambrios Technologies Company of Sunnyvale, Calif.; Brewer Science of Rolla, Mo.; and QinetiQ North America-Technology Solutions Group of Boston.

"We are excited that DARPA selected our team for the PoP project," stated Farhad Moghadam, president and CEO of Ascent Solar in a press release issued by the company.

"In order to meet the aggressive goals of performance, capacity, and military toughness, our team has put together a definitive plan that combines our flexible CIGS [copper-indium-gallium-diselenide] production experience and existing MILSTD 810G military product, advanced high-temperature substrates from QinetiQ, the combined expertise in multijunction thin film technology from ASTI and IEC, films for optical and electrical enhancement from Brewer and Cambrios, and enhanced packaging technologies being developed by ITN and ASTI. The outcome of the program dovetails nicely with our existing technology improvement pathway for our flexible thin-film monolithically integrated CIGS-based PV modules for the Department of Defense," Moghadam said.

Established at the University of Delaware in 1972, IEC is a laboratory devoted to research and development of thin-film photovoltaic solar cells and other photonic devices. IEC was designated a University Center of Excellence for Photovoltaic Research and Education by the Department of Energy and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in 1992.

Fundamental materials and device research is carried out at IEC in parallel with process engineering studies and analysis of film deposition and processing. The broad scope of the research and development effort offers the opportunity for study in the fields of physics, chemistry, materials science, chemical engineering, mechanical engineering, and electrical engineering, as well as collaboration with industrial groups seeking to manufacture and commercialize photovoltaics.

IEC is a totally integrated laboratory in which materials and films are synthesized and characterized and electrical devices are fabricated and analyzed, offering the unique experience of correlating properties of completed devices with their fabrication processing all under one roof. Close collaboration between IEC staff and thin-film photovoltaic industrial partners insures that the research is relevant to today's technology and includes state-of-the-art process development.

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