More Efficient Dyed Cells Offer Hope for Cheap Solar Windows

Thursday, November 3, 2011 - 17:30 in Physics & Chemistry

Plants have been using a green pigment for billions of years to capture sunlight, turning it into a flow of electrons and storing its energy in the chemical bonds of big organic molecules (also known as food). Given that successful history, chemist Michael Graetzel of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne and his colleagues turned to a compound similar in shape and color to chlorophyll when they set out to build a better solar cell. [More]

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