The race is on to find more economical, clean and efficient forms of energy, and an international research collaboration is working to find a solution by optimizing solar power using organic, soft electronic materials as semiconductors.
Madalina Furis, Ph.D. and researchers with the Center for Quantum Research and Technology at the University of Oklahoma, will collaborate with the University of Vermont, as well as Yamagata University and Osaka University in Japan, to investigate harvesting, storing and transferring energy in soft electronic materials. The three-year study is the focus of a $1.5 million grant from the National Science Foundation’s Partnerships for International Research and Education, or PIRE, program.
This collaboration will bring the researchers unprecedented access to Japan’s soft materials and optoelectronic device fabrication and characterization facilities and foster connections with semiconductor industries of the future, enabling rapid progress for the future generation of soft electronic materials.
“Photovoltaics is, of course, a major strategic area of interest for the United States because it is an area of research focused on harvesting sunlight – the sun’s energy – in order to gain freedom from sources of energy that have a limited lifetime,” Furis said. “Because we’re talking about harvesting light and radiation from the sun, the optical properties of the semiconductors – their ability to absorb sunlight and eventually convert it into electricity – is central to this whole endeavor.”
The research team includes specialists in photovoltaics, as well as experts in how energy is transported or moves through devices and experts in device fabrication.
Furis said traditionally when people hear about soft matter, they don’t necessarily think of the semiconductor industry.