TOKYO: Austrian and Japanese researchers on
Wednesday unveiled solar cells thinner than a thread of spider silk that is
flexible enough to be wrapped around a single human hair.
The
thin-film device, comprising electrodes on a plastic foil, is about 1.9
micro-metres thick, a tenth the size of the thinnest solar cells currently
available, the researchers said.
One
micro-metre is one millionth of a metre (3.3 feet).
"The
total thickness of this device is less than a typical thread of spider
silk," the researchers said in a report carried by online science journal
Nature Communications.
"Being
ultra-thin means you don't feel its weight and it is elastic," said one of
the researchers, Tsuyoshi Sekitani from the University of Tokyo.
"You
could attach the device to your clothes like a badge to collect electricity
(from the sun)... Elderly people who might want to wear sensors to monitor
their health would not need to carry around batteries," Sekitani told AFP.
The
research was done jointly by Martin Kaltenbrunner, Siegfried Bauer and other
researchers from Johannes Kepler University of Austria as well as Sekitani and
other contributors from University of Tokyo.
Sekitani
said it was possible to make the cells bigger.
"Power
generation by solar cells increases with their size. As this device is soft, it
is less prone to damage by bending even if it gets bigger," he said.
Sekitani
said the team hoped to increase the rate at which the device converts sunlight
into electricity and put it to practical use in around five years.
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AFP/al
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