The 23-year-old took out the people's choice award as well as the prize for young leader in environmental science and climate change at tonight's awards in Sydney. Ms Kuepper developed and patented the iJET solar cell which can be made cheaply at low temperatures using items such as an inkjet printer, nail polish and a pizza oven. The University of NSW student and lecturer hopes it will lead to green energy in developing nations, providing electricity to the world's two billion poorest people. ...
Current production techniques for photovoltaic, or solar, cells make them expensive, but the iJET can be made without high-tech environments or components. Ms Kuepper's school of photovoltaic and renewable energy engineering at the University of NSW also took out the Eureka Prize for innovative solutions to climate change, with the Sydney-based university taking out six of the 20 prizes.
Kuepper presented the paper in Anchorage last year, its abstract is here.
In the electrical world, there are resistors and conductors; that is, materials which resist electrical current passing through, and materials which allow it. In between the two are semiconductors, materials which resist a bit but also conduct a bit.
Silicon is a semiconductor. When the light strikes it, a little bit of electricity starts up, but it finds it difficult to get anywhere. So you can't just get a big slab of silicon, put it in the sun, put copper wires on the corners and get lots of electricity. Instead you get a thin layer of silicon (thinner stuff resists less and conducts more) and you put conductors all over it.
Usually those conductors are printed by a photolithogtaphic process, a bit like it's done with computer chips. This is slow and expensive. Kuepper's inkjet method promises to make this quicker and cheaper.
The major thing of getting the silicon and making it pure would remain. It's just the final printing this makes easier.
I'm not convinced that this is something that developing countries will pick up... just because some academics think so.
It may however lower production costs if it lives up to the creators promises.
One from the Australian on a mysterious solar power technique developed at UNSW - Nicole has a Eureka moment - twice
The patent is here:
http://www.wipo.int/pctdb/en/wo.jsp?wo=2007059578&IA=AU2006001773&DISPLA...
But I'm not sure if that reduces the mysteriousness!
- I still can't work out if the nail polish goes into the inkjet or into the pizza oven...
:-)
Maybe it's under the rubber gloves...

Cripes - thanks for providing the link, but its as unintelligible a patent as I've ever come across.
Does anyone have a simple diagram and basic explanation of what this thing is ?
Kuepper presented the paper in Anchorage last year, its abstract is here.
In the electrical world, there are resistors and conductors; that is, materials which resist electrical current passing through, and materials which allow it. In between the two are semiconductors, materials which resist a bit but also conduct a bit.
Silicon is a semiconductor. When the light strikes it, a little bit of electricity starts up, but it finds it difficult to get anywhere. So you can't just get a big slab of silicon, put it in the sun, put copper wires on the corners and get lots of electricity. Instead you get a thin layer of silicon (thinner stuff resists less and conducts more) and you put conductors all over it.
Usually those conductors are printed by a photolithogtaphic process, a bit like it's done with computer chips. This is slow and expensive. Kuepper's inkjet method promises to make this quicker and cheaper.
The major thing of getting the silicon and making it pure would remain. It's just the final printing this makes easier.
The paper is available from here
I'm not convinced that this is something that developing countries will pick up... just because some academics think so.
It may however lower production costs if it lives up to the creators promises.