SOLAR DAILY
Engineering next generation solar powered batteries
by Staff Writers
Mumbai, India (SPX) Jan 01, 2022

Schematic of Solar Battery Charging Process and a photograph of charging the solar battery using a green low power LED.

Secondary batteries, such as lithium ion batteries, need to be recharged once the stored energy is used up. In a bid to decrease our dependence on fossil fuels, scientists have been exploring sustainable ways to recharge secondary batteries. Recently, Amar Kumar (graduate student at T. N. Narayanan's lab in TIFR Hyderabad) and his colleagues have assembled a compact lithium ion battery with photosensitive materials that can be directly recharged with solar energy.

Initial efforts to channel solar energy to recharge batteries employed the use of photovoltaic cells and batteries as separate entities. Solar energy is converted by photovoltaic cells into electrical energy that is consequently stored as chemical energy in batteries. The energy stored in these batteries is then used to power the electronic devices.

This relay of energy from one component to the other, for example, from the photovoltaic cell to the battery, leads to some loss in energy. To prevent energy loss, there was a shift towards exploring the use of photosensitive components inside a battery itself. There has been substantial progress in integrating photosensitive components within a battery resulting in the formation of more compact solar batteries.

Though improved in design, existing solar batteries still have some drawbacks. A few of these disadvantages associated with various types of solar batteries include: decreased ability to harness enough solar energy, use of organic electrolyte that may corrode the photosensitive organic component inside a battery, and formation of side products that hinder sustained performance of a battery in the long term.

In this study, Amar Kumar decided to explore new photosensitive materials which can also incorporate lithium and build a solar battery that would be leak-proof and operate efficiently in ambient conditions.

Solar batteries which have two electrodes usually include a photosensitive dye in one of the electrodes physically mixed with a stabilising component which helps drive the flow of electrons through the battery. An electrode which is a physical mixture of two materials has limitations on optimal usage of surface area of the electrode.

To avoid this, researchers from T. N. Narayanan's group created a heterostructure of photosensitive MoS2 (molybdenum disulphide) and MoOx (molybdenum oxide) to function as a single electrode.

Being a heterostructure wherein the MoS2 and MoOx have been fused together by a chemical vapour deposition technique, this electrode allows for more surface area to absorb solar energy. When light rays hit the electrode, the photosensitive MoS2 generates electrons and simultaneously creates vacancies called holes. MoOx keeps the electrons and holes apart, and transfers the electrons to the battery circuit.

This solar battery, which was completely assembled from scratch, was found to operate well when exposed to simulated solar light. The composition of the heterostructure electrode used in this battery has been studied extensively with transmission electron microscope as well. The authors of the study are presently working towards unearthing the mechanism by which MoS2 and MoOx work in tandem with lithium anode resulting in the generation of current.

While this solar battery achieves a higher interaction of photosensitive material with light, it is yet to achieve generation of optimum levels of current to fully recharge a lithium ion battery. With this goal in mind, T. N. Narayanan's lab is exploring how such heterostructure electrodes can pave the way for addressing the challenges of present day solar batteries.

Research Report: "Photo Rechargeable Li-Ion Batteries Using Nanorod Heterostructure Electrodes"


Related Links
Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
All About Solar Energy at SolarDaily.com

SOLAR DAILY
AFRL, Northrop Grumman demonstrate solar to radio frequency conversion
Kirtland AFB NM (SPX) Dec 27, 2021
The Air Force Research Laboratory's and Northrop Grumman's Space Solar Power Incremental Demonstrations and Research (SSPIDR) Project have successfully conducted the first end-to-end demonstration of key hardware for the Arachne flight experiment. A ground demonstration of novel components for the "sandwich tile" were used to successfully convert solar energy to radio frequency (RF) - a fundamental step required to pave the way for a large-scale solar power collection system in space. In 201 ... 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
L3Harris Completes Final US Missile Defense Agency Satellite Design Milestone

Northrop and Raytheon complete Next Generation Interceptor review

Northrop Grumman completes environmental testing for Next Gen OPIR GEO payload

India May Become 1st in Line to Buy Russian Air Defense System S-500

SOLAR DAILY
Northrop Grumman completes Anti-Access/Area Denial Missile Flight Test

Putin hails multiple launch test of hypersonic missile

Iran fires missiles during drills in warning to Israel

Iran announces anti-missile system for its tanks

SOLAR DAILY
Australia's First MQ-4C Triton Takes Shape

China's high-flying drone giant DJI in US cross-hairs

Northrop Grumman Global Hawk to Expand Participation in SkyRange Program

Armed with drones, Turkey explores African arms sales

SOLAR DAILY
SPAINSAT NG program successfully passes Critical Design Review

Honeywell, SES and Hughes demonstrate Multinetwork Airborne Connectivity

Airbus and OneWeb expand their partnership to connect European defence and security forces

SES Government Solutions releases new unified operational network

SOLAR DAILY
AFRL'S PNT AgilePod achieves flight test objectives

Two Russian paratroopers die in Belarus drills jump

SOLAR DAILY
US presses for Myanmar arms embargo after massacre

Japan unveils record annual budget and defence spend

UAE protests stringent Biden conditions for jet fighters

Cambodian PM orders US weapons destroyed after arms embargo

SOLAR DAILY
India says China 'inventing' names in disputed region

Dalai Lama's last escort on 1959 escape from Tibet dies

US, Russia to hold Ukraine talks early January in Geneva

Ukraine trains civilians to defend against Russian invasion

SOLAR DAILY
The secret of ultralight but stiff sandwich nanotubes

AFRL Nano Team takes lead in building stronger ties with India