Photochemical Turbo Power for Solar Cells

Red light from a laser pointer is converted into higher-energy yellow<br />light as it passes through the liquid photochemical upconverter.<br />Source: University of Sydney, Australia

Red light from a laser pointer is converted into higher-energy yellow
light as it passes through the liquid photochemical upconverter.
Source: University of Sydney, Australia

How organic molecules make yellow light from red.

They have developed a kind of “turbo for solar cells”, called photochemical upconversion: Two energy-poor photons that would normally be ineffective in the solar cell are merged into one energy-rich photon, which can then contribute towards the electricity yield. Further research in this direction may make it possible to exceed the 30 percent mark. The team has published its results in the journal “Energy & Environmental Science” (DOI: 10.1039/C2EE21136J).

The photochemical solar-cell turbo uses organic molecules to merge energy-poor red photons together into energy-richer yellow photons. The secret is in the choice of molecules, of which two different types are placed behind the solar cell in solution. The task of the first molecule type is to absorb the energy-poor light particles and to store their energy. The crux here is that these molecules enter a persistent state in which the spins, or magnetic moments, of the light-excited electrons in each molecule line up in parallel. This prevents re-emission of the absorbed particles.

This persistent state of the first molecule type lasts long enough for the energy to be transferred into a persistent state of a second type of organic molecule. This energy transfer takes place when the two types of molecule encounter each other in the solution. If two excited molecules of the second type then encounter each other, then one of them returns to its base state. The other thereupon assumes an even higher energy state, which is extremely short-lived. This latter molecule then sends off a single photon of high enough energy to be absorbed by the solar cell.

“We are thus the first to demonstrate an efficiency gain in a solar cell by photochemical upconversion,” says project head Dr. Klaus Lips of the HZB Institute for Silicon Photovoltaics. “The achieved increase in solar cell efficiency is still low – about 0.1 percent absolute – and the sunlight even had to be concentrated fifty times, but the path to further improvement is clearly discernible.” Yet it is rocky and hard, as Lips emphasizes: “For the concept study now published, we had not used a 25 percent high-capacity solar cell yet, as will be needed for later practical application.” They now have to redevelop the organic molecules of the photochemical upconverter so that they do not have to be dissolved in a liquid. They will also have to perform their action under normal, unconcentrated sunlight, and an infrared converter will be required for crystalline silicon.

“The concepts for this were developed in close cooperation between Sydney and HZB,” says Klaus Lips. The essential advantage of this ‘3rd generation photovoltaics’ over other approaches is there is no need for costly redevelopment of solar cells; rather, merely adding the upconverter would in principle suffice to boost the efficiency. Klaus Lips concludes: “Just as you would build a turbo into a car to make it go faster – and wouldn’t necessarily go and design an entirely new car.”

Further Information:

Timothy Schmidt
School of Chemistry
University of Sydney, Australia
Tel.: +61 (439) 386109
t.schmidt@chem.usyd.edu.au

HS

  • Copy link

You might also be interested in

  • What Zinc concentration in teeth reveals
    Science Highlight
    19.02.2026
    What Zinc concentration in teeth reveals
    Teeth are composites of mineral and protein, with a bulk of bony dentin that is highly porous. This structure is allows teeth to be both strong and sensitive. Besides calcium and phosphate, teeth contain trace elements such as zinc. Using complementary microscopy imaging techniques, a team from Charité Berlin, TU Berlin and HZB has quantified the distribution of natural zinc along and across teeth in 3 dimensions. The team found that, as porosity in dentine increases towards the pulp, zinc concentration increases 5~10 fold. These results help to understand the influence of widely-used zinc-containing biomaterials (e.g. filling) and could inspire improvements in dental medicine.
  • Fascinating archaeological find becomes a source of knowledge
    News
    12.02.2026
    Fascinating archaeological find becomes a source of knowledge
    The Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Historical Monuments (BLfD) has sent a rare artefact from the Middle Bronze Age to Berlin for examination using cutting-edge, non-destructive methods. It is a 3,400-year-old bronze sword, unearthed during archaeological excavations in Nördlingen, Swabia, in 2023. Experts have been able to determine how the hilt and blade are connected, as well as how the rare and well-preserved decorations on the pommel were made. This has provided valuable insight into the craft techniques employed in southern Germany during the Bronze Age. The BLfD used 3D computed tomography and X-ray diffraction to analyse internal stresses at the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin (HZB), as well as X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy at a BESSY II beamline supervised by the Bundesanstalt für Materialforschung und -prüfung (BAM).
  • Element cobalt exhibits surprising properties
    Science Highlight
    11.02.2026
    Element cobalt exhibits surprising properties
    The element cobalt is considered a typical ferromagnet with no further secrets. However, an international team led by HZB researcher Dr. Jaime Sánchez-Barriga has now uncovered complex topological features in its electronic structure. Spin-resolved measurements of the band structure (spin-ARPES) at BESSY II revealed entangled energy bands that cross each other along extended paths in specific crystallographic directions, even at room temperature. As a result, cobalt can be considered as a highly tunable and unexpectedly rich topological platform, opening new perspectives for exploiting magnetic topological states in future information technologies.