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Tech

New plastic can better convert solar energy

Canadian Press

TORONTO � Researchers at the University of Toronto have invented an
infrared-sensitive material that's five times more efficient at turning the
sun's power into electrical energy than current methods.

The discovery could lead to shirts and sweaters capable of recharging our
cellphones and other wireless devices, said Ted Sargent, professor of
electrical and computer engineering at the university.

Sargent and other researchers combined specially-designed minute particles
called quantum dots, three to four nanometres across, with a polymer to make
a plastic that can detect energy in the infrared.

Infrared light is not visible to the naked eye but it is what most remote
controls emit, in small amounts, to control devices such as TVs and DVD
players.

It also contains a huge untapped resource -- despite the surge in popularity
of solar cells in the 1990s, we still miss half of the sun's power, Sargent
said.

"In fact, there's enough power from the sun hitting the Earth every day to
supply all the world's needs for energy 10,000 times over,'' Sargent said in
a phone interview Sunday from Boston. He is currently a visiting professor
of nanotechnology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Sargent said the new plastic composite is, in layman's terms, a layer of
film that "catches'' solar energy. He said the film can be applied to any
device, much like paint is coated on a wall.

"We've done the same thing, but not with something that just sit there on
the wall the way paint does,'' said the Ottawa native. "We've done it to
make a device which actually harnesses the power in the room in the
infrared.''

The film can convert up to 30 per cent of the sun's power into usable,
electrical energy. Today's best plastic solar cells capture only about six
per cent.

Sargent said the advance would not only wipe away that inefficiency, but
also resolve the hassle of recharging our countless gadgets and pave the way
to a true wireless world.

"We now have our cellphones and our BlackBerries and we're walking around
without the need to plug in, in order to get our data,'' he said.

"But we seem trapped at the moment in needing to plug in to get our power.
That's because we charge these things up electrically, from the outlet. But
there's actually huge amounts of power all around us coming from the sun.''
The film has the ability to be sprayed or woven into shirts so that our
cuffs or collars could recharge our IPods, Sargent said.

While that may sound like a Star Trek dream, venture capitalists are keen to
Sargent's invention.

Josh Wolfe, managing partner at Lux Capital, a New York City-based venture
capital firm, said while such a luxury may be five years away, the
technology knows no bounds.

"When you have a material advance which literally materially changes the way
that energy is absorbed and transmitted to our devices... somebody out there
tinkering away in a bedroom or in a government lab is going to come up with
a great idea for a new device that will shock us all,'' he said in a phone
interview.

"When the Internet was created nobody envisioned that the killer app
(application) would be e-mail or instant messaging.''

Sargent's work was published in the online edition of Nature Materials on
Sunday and will appear in its February issue.



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