Climate Change and Renewable Energy News and Discussion

tokenanalyst

Brigadier
Registered Member
Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics has made new progress in the research of flexible perovskite solar cell packaging technology

Recently, Associate Researcher Zheng Yifan from the Thin Film Optics R&D Center of the High Power Laser Component Technology and Engineering Department of the Shanghai Institute of Optics and Precision Mechanics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, together with Professor Wei Bin from the School of Mechanical Engineering of Shanghai University and Associate Researcher Shi Wei from the School of Microelectronics, have made important progress in the research field of flexible perovskite solar cells (FPSCs ) encapsulation technology. They proposed a new transparent thermoplastic polyurethane ( TPU ) encapsulation technology, which successfully achieved efficient encapsulation of FPSCs and significantly improved the stability and durability of the device. The relevant research results were published in Energy Technology under the title " Moisture-Resistant Thermoplastic Polyurethane Encapsulation for Flexible Perovskite Solar Cells" .

PSCs have shown great application prospects in the photovoltaic industry due to their high efficiency and low-cost potential, and are regarded as a strong competitor for the next generation of photovoltaic technology. However, the high sensitivity of perovskite materials to moisture and oxygen is one of the main obstacles to their commercialization. Although traditional rigid packaging solutions can effectively isolate devices, their brittleness limits their application in flexible electronic devices. Therefore, the development of flexible packaging technology suitable for FPSCs has become a research hotspot.

In this study, the research team deeply explored the performance of a variety of flexible packaging materials, and finally selected TPU with excellent flexibility, low water permeability and high light transmittance as the packaging material. Through a series of experiments, the compatibility of the TPU packaging process with the PSC module was verified , and lossless packaging was achieved. The efficiency of the device did not show a significant decrease after packaging. In addition, through microscopic morphology characterization and analysis, it was confirmed that TPU packaging can effectively prevent water and oxygen intrusion, delay the decomposition of perovskite materials, and improve the stability of the film. The experimental results show that TPU -encapsulated PSCs can still maintain 95% of the initial photoelectric conversion efficiency after 1000 hours at 25°C and 50% relative humidity , and can still maintain 80% of the initial efficiency after immersion in water for 200 hours , showing excellent stability improvement. In addition, TPU packaging has significant advantages in manufacturing costs, provides systematic and comprehensive guidance for the packaging design of FPSCs , and provides key technical support for promoting PSCs technology from the laboratory to commercial production, which is expected to trigger major changes in the field of renewable energy.

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sabiothailand

Junior Member
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I feel a bit bleak about the whole climate change thing.

I've been wondering more and more: At this point, can it still be reversed? Do we still have hope?
 

tokenanalyst

Brigadier
Registered Member
At this point, can it still be reversed?
No directly, it will required some geo engineering by for example shadowing the earth with some cooling particles and gases with the caveat that plants and crops need sunlight to produce food. Removing CO2 directly will require the same quantity of energy that humanity used to output the CO2 and that is assuming cutting human emission sources to zero, which is impossible.
Do we still have hope?
Human economic activity produce two kind of pollutants, "cooling" pollutants like SO2 and "heating" pollutants like CO2, looks like that cooling pollutants was masking the real effect of global warming. As nations introduce pollution legislation there has been an acceleration of the effects of heating pollutants like CO2. I think depending on economic growth a 3 to 4 degree celsius world is not a far fetched idea and humans will have to learn to live with that. We only have 3 years before hitting 1.5 degrees according to some sources. Imagine the hottest day and add 1.5 to 2.5 degrees over that.

That good news is no more Florida man in the news. That state in going to get hit the hardest in the US.
 

tphuang

General
Staff member
Super Moderator
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Envision is starting the largest ever green ammonia in Chifeng. Uses the huge renewable build up there. 10 GW with goal of 40GW renewable by 2030. Interesting enough, they are call ammonia the new oil. It tells you how China thinks about green chemical products like green ammonia and methanol.
 

Wrought

Senior Member
Registered Member
74% of all global wind and solar projects is a wild number.

China is building 510 gigawatts of utility-scale solar and wind projects, according to data from the Global Energy Monitor, a non-governmental organisation based in San Francisco. That compares to about 689GW under construction globally, GEM said. A rough rule of thumb is that a gigawatt can potentially supply electricity for about one million homes. “China is [ . . .] leading the world in global renewable energy build-out,” the GEM report said. “It continues to add solar and wind power at a record pace.”

China is expected to add at least 246.5GW of solar and 97.7GW of wind this year, according to figures from the GEM report. The country had 1.5 terawatts of solar and wind power capacity up and running as of the end of March.
Solar and wind accounted for 22.5 per cent of China’s total electricity consumption in the first quarter of 2025, according to the government’s National Energy Administration.

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