On the feasibility of multi-polymer, liquid-crystal silica photovoltaics: simulating diodic p-n junctions with ionic gradients

Physics – Condensed Matter – Materials Science

Scientific paper

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10 pages, 6 figures

Scientific paper

Conventional photovoltaic machinery, including traditional silicone panels, fails to address efficiency problems. Recent technological advances suggest less metal-specific reliance, but plastic substrates are bound by cost-inefficiency. Photovoltaic paint effectively dissociates from metal dependency and relies on a combination p-n junction diode principle/thermoelectric effect to generate electrical energy from solar exposure. Replicating the junction is accomplished via multi-polymer layers of crystalline-silica water-based paint with ionic solution concentration gradient overlap, reconstructing the depletion zone and, in thermal respects, construes the thermoelectric effect via replication of a heavily modified thermocouple. Experimentation revealed the largest gradient (50%-10%) of ionic solution, specifically, sodium-chloride solution, per paint solution liter generated the largest electrical energy yield (Cf. control yielding none). Maintenance of a functional electro-conductive gradient is achieved with specialized, non-acidic solution, but the lifespan of the charge is virtually instantaneous. The experimentation yielded possible exploits for multi-polymer conduction layer advancement; however, the production of solar-receptive paints replicating the capture and distribution scheme of solar panels, sans the inflexibility and limited application. Prospective applications include electrical automobile augmentation, solar-receptive buildings, and vast tracts of solar farms given solid initial conditions. Weathering, life expectancy, and storage are paint-specific. The intentions of sculpting the ideal alternative energy are in efforts to propose novel mechanisms curbing fossil fuel dependence and arousing intellectual curiosity and creativity on the many channels converging on innovative environmental feats.

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