SOLAR DAILY
Could be old recycling next-generation solar panels fosters green planet
by Staff Writers
Ithaca NY (SPX) Jul 07, 2021

A solar cell made with perovskite, shown here, shows promise as an energy-efficient, scalable and longer-lasting way to create solar panels - and may be recycled for even greater sustainability.

Tossing worn-out solar panels into landfills may soon become electronics waste history.

Designing a recycling strategy for a new, forthcoming generation of photovoltaic solar cells - made from metal halide perovskites, a family of crystalline materials with structures like the natural mineral calcium titanate - will add a stronger dose of environmental friendliness to a green industry, according to Cornell University-led research published June 24 in Nature Sustainability.

The paper shows substantial benefits to recycling perovskite solar panels, though they are still in the commercial development stage, said Fengqi You, the Roxanne E. and Michael J. Zak Professor in Energy Systems Engineering in the College of Engineering.

"When perovskite solar panels reach the end of their useful life, how do we deal with this kind of electronic waste?" said You, also a faculty fellow at the Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability. "It is a new class of materials. By properly recycling it, we could potentially reduce its already low carbon footprint.

"As scientists design solar cells, they look at performance," You said. "They seek to know energy conversion efficiency and stability, and often neglect designing for recycling."

Last year, You and his laboratory found that photovoltaic wafers in solar panels containing all-perovskite structures outperform photovoltaic cells made from state-of-the-art crystalline silicon, and the perovskite-silicon tandem - with cells stacked like pancakes to better absorb light - perform exceptionally well.

Perovskite photovoltaic wafers offer a faster return on the initial energy investment than silicon-based solar panels because all-perovskite solar cells consume less energy in the manufacturing process.

Recycling them enhances their sustainability, as the recycled perovskite solar cells could bring 72.6% lower primary energy consumption and a 71.2% reduction in carbon footprint, according to the paper, "Life Cycle Assessment of Recycling Strategies for Perovskite Photovoltaic Modules," co-authored by Xueyu Tian, a doctoral student at Cornell Systems Engineering, and Samuel D. Stranks of the University of Cambridge.

"Lowering the energy needed to produce the cells indicates a significant reduction of energy payback and greenhouse gas emissions," said Tian.

The best recycled perovskite cell architecture could see an energy payback time of about one month, with a carbon footprint as low as 13.4 grams of carbon dioxide equivalent output per kilowatt hour of electricity produced. Without recycling, the energy payback time and carbon footprint of new perovskite solar cells show a range of 70 days to 13 months, and 27.5 to 158.0 grams of carbon dioxide equivalent throughout their life cycles.

Today's market-leading silicon photovoltaic cells can expect an energy payback period of 1.3 to 2.4 years, with an initial carbon footprint between 22.1 and 38.1 grams of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions per kilowatt hour output.

"Recycling makes perovskites outcompete all other rivals," Tian said.

Informed state and federal policies, along with recycling infrastructure development strategies, can further mitigate the environmental impacts in making photovoltaic solar cells.

Said You: "The real value of an effective green perovskite solar panel industry may rely on a recycling program."

Research paper


Related Links
Cornell University
All About Solar Energy at SolarDaily.com

SOLAR DAILY
Envision: China's renewable energy giant
Beijing (AFP) July 2, 2021
Plans were announced this week for two new electric car battery plants in France and Britain involving Envision, the Shanghai-based company that has quietly built a global renewable energy empire. Envision's two billion euro ($2.4 billion) electric car battery plant in Douai, northern France, will supply French carmaker Renault, it said, becoming France's second so-called "gigafactory". Carmaker Nissan - Renault's Japanese partner - also said Thursday that it will invest 1 billion pounds ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

SOLAR DAILY
Weapons System installation begins at Aegis Ashore Poland

Leaders Discuss Space-Based Sensors That Can Track Missiles

Pentagon announces missile defense review

USS Paul Ignatius fires Standard Missile-3 interceptors in test

SOLAR DAILY
Legislators object to Navy plan to end nuclear cruise missile program

Defense Dept.: U.S. accelerating hypersonic missile development

USS Ross conducts live-fire missile test in NATO exercises

Surveillance planes test Harpoon missiles in NATO exercise

SOLAR DAILY
OSU drone expertise is supporting the exploration of Earth and the Final Frontier

Incendiary Gaza balloon causes fire in Israel

Navy to choose first cadre of MQ-25 drone operators

Sagetech Avionics receives $12M investment

SOLAR DAILY
China's relay satellites facilitate clear, smooth space-ground communication

Filtering out interference for next-generation wideband arrays

ESA helps Europe boost secure connectivity

Isotropic Systems and SES GS complete trials for of new connectivity for US Military

SOLAR DAILY
Two soldiers jailed for deadly E.Guinea army blast

Oshkosh nets $152M deal for JLTVs for U.S. military, NATO allies

Northrop Grumman to build more combat-proven infrared countermeasure systems

Developing morphogenic electrochemical interfaces

SOLAR DAILY
Swiss govt eyes order of US fighter jets, air defence units

House subcommittee supports 2.7% pay hike for troops

Philippines' human rights record an issue in pending $2.6B military sale

Myanmar junta leader thanks Russia for boosting military

SOLAR DAILY
US, Sri Lanka, Japan militaries conclude weeklong CARAT exercise

Dutch say Russian jets buzzed warship in Black Sea

Russia, China extend friendship treaty, hail ties

U.S., Australia, Japan complete Exercise Southern Jackaroo; USS Ross deploys to Black Sea

SOLAR DAILY
Nano-Bio Materials Consortium introduces new AFRL-Industry Co-Development Program

Nanostructured device stops light in its tracks