IIT Roorkee makes low-cost solar cells from delectable jamun

Researchers at IIT Roorkee used the juice of jamun as photosensitiser for making solar cells. It can be a major breakthrough in making inexpensive solar cells



Photo by Sanjeev Verma/Hindustan Times via Getty Images
Photo by Sanjeev Verma/Hindustan Times via Getty Images
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PTI

Indian summers are incomplete if devoid of the joy of plucking and feasting on fresh, delectable jamuns. But scientists at IIT Roorkee have found a novel use for the juicy Indian fruit – making inexpensive solar cells.

Researchers used naturally occurring pigment found in jamun as an inexpensive photosensitiser for Dye Sensitised Solar Cells (DSSCs) or Gratzel cells.

"The dark colour of jamun and abundance of jamun trees in the IIT campus clicked the idea that it might be useful as a dye in the typical dye sensitised solar cells (DSSC)," said lead researcher Soumitra Satapathi, assistant professor at Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Roorkee in Uttarakhand.

Gratzel cells are thin film solar cells composed of a porous layer of titanium dioxide (TiO2) coated photoanode, a layer of dye molecules that absorbs sunlight, an electrolyte for regenerating the dye, and a cathode.

These components form a sandwich-like structure with the dye molecule or photosensitiser playing a pivotal role through its ability to absorb visible light.

Researchers extracted dyes from jamun using ethanol. They also used fresh plums and black currant, along with mixed berry juices which contain pigments that give characteristic colour to jamun. The mixture was then centrifuged and decanted. The extracted coloured pigment called anthocyanin was used as a sensitiser.

"Natural pigments are way economical in comparison to regular ruthenium-based pigments and scientists are optimising to improve the efficiency," said Satapathi, who is also a visiting professor at the University of Massachusetts Lowell in the US.

"The increasing pressure on fossil fuels and concern of global warming has inspired continuous search for alternate energy," said Satapathi

Uncertainty over the pace at which new large dams or nuclear plants can be built means strong reliance on solar power – an area where India has high potential and equally high ambition – to deliver on the country's pledge to build up a 40%share of non-fossil fuel capacity in the power sector by 2030, researchers said.

The research team, which includes Nipun Sawhney and Anubhav Raghav, is very optimistic that the process can easily be replicated for mass production of solar cells.

The simplicity and cost effectiveness of the overall fabrication process, widespread availability of fruits and juices, and ease of extraction of anthocyanin dyes render them novel and inexpensive candidates for solar cells application, researchers said.

The research was published in the Journal of Photovoltaics.

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Published: 26 Apr 2017, 2:19 PM