Solar cells of efficiencies above 30%

Solar cells of efficiencies above 30%


BIG LEAP: India took eight years to install 20GW solar generation capacity, but set up 100 GW in the next eight
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DHIRAJ SINGH

Vinay Rustagi, Chief Business Officer at Premier Energies Ltd, a solar cell and module manufacturer, believes that in just three to four years, the market will see solar cells with conversion efficiencies above 30 per cent, compared with about 25 per cent today. That would be a huge leap. The efficiency here indicates how much of the sunlight falling on the solar cell is converted into electrical energy.

High-efficiency cells are the next frontier of the solar industry. In India, the sector has come a long way since its beginnings in 2010, when the National Solar Mission was launched.

It took the industry eight years to set up 20 GW of manufacturing capacity; in the next eight, it added 100 GW. This was possible mainly because China hammered down module prices — modules account for 55–60 per cent of the cost of a solar plant. But cost efficiency arising from improvements in cell efficiency (cells are assembled into modules) also played a significant role.

Cell efficiency has increased from around 17 per cent to 25 per cent over the last decade. Rustagi expects a repeat of that trajectory. “There is rapid progress. I am pretty optimistic that by 2028 or 2029, there will be commercially available tandem solar cells with efficiencies above 30 per cent,” he told businessline.

A one percentage point increase in module efficiency can mean an additional 13,000–17,000 kWh of generation per MW of installed capacity annually. At a tariff of roughly ₹3 per kWh, this translates to ₹40–50 lakh worth of additional generation for a 100 MW plant. A five percentage point gain, therefore, works out to be ₹2–2.5 crore worth of extra generation.

Scientists broadly agree with Rustagi. Research literature is replete with reports of high-efficiency cell development. For instance, Prof Dinesh Kabra, who has founded the startup ART-PV India, has developed a tandem cell boasting 30.2 per cent efficiency. ART-PV is setting up two manufacturing plants in Mumbai, and Kabra expects the cells to reach the market within two years.

Bandgap engineering

Behind the improvements in cell efficiency lies a science called bandgap engineering.

Light consists of streaming photons of multiple frequencies (and corresponding wavelengths). Each colour of light occupies a different frequency band; even within a single colour, there are multiple frequencies.

Photons of different frequencies carry different amounts of energy — even though they all travel at the same speed. Think of it as two cars moving at the same speed, one carrying a single passenger and the other four.

In a semiconducting material such as a solar cell, a photon transfers its energy to an electron, allowing the electron to move from the valence band to the conduction band. The energy difference between these two bands is called the bandgap.

If the bandgap is too large, many photons do not have enough energy to excite electrons, resulting in lost sunlight energy. A single-junction solar cell has a fixed bandgap, and the well-known Shockley–Queisser limit states that its efficiency cannot exceed 33 per cent. Beyond a point, improving solar-cell efficiency becomes a material and device architecture problem.

A tandem cell addresses this by stacking two layers — like two slices of bread — each with a different bandgap. The top layer absorbs some photons, the bottom layer absorbs others, allowing more of the solar spectrum to be used to raise the overall efficiency.

Globally, scientists are working furiously on bandgap engineering. For example, Sarowr Basm Almahsen and Ghaleb Ali Al-Dahash of the College of Science for Women, University of Babylon, in Hilla (Iraq), have developed a tandem cell, combining two materials. In a paper published in Results in Optics, they write: “We suggest a solar cell made entirely without lead, using two layers: a top layer made of Cs₂AgBi₀.₇₅Sb₀.₂₅Br₆ [cesium silver bismuth-antimony bromide] with a wide bandgap of 1.8 eV, and a bottom layer made of FASnI₃ [formamidinium tin triiodide] with a narrow bandgap of 1.41 eV. This is a critical advancement, as most high-efficiency tandem cells still rely on toxic lead-based perovskites (e.g., MAPbI₃ [methylammonium lead iodide]).”

A bandgap difference of 0.39 eV is quite significant in semiconductor physics. The researchers claim a cell efficiency of 28.2 per cent.

In another paper, a team of scientists from various Indian universities report a tandem cell that places a perovskite layer on top of a conventional CIGS (copper indium gallium selenide) cell, creating a bandgap difference of 0.53 eV. The claimed efficiency is 32.56 per cent.

Switching to tandem

All this physics is fascinating — but how does a company that has invested millions of dollars in conventional cell manufacturing make the leap to tandem cells?

Rustagi says it is possible to retrofit an existing plant. Premier Energies is investing ₹5,000 crore to expand its cell and module capacities to 10.6 GW and 11.1 GW, respectively, by September 2026. Rustagi is not worried about the transition. “We are building a flexible design into our plants to make sure that we can retrofit them easily and make them compatible with these new technologies,” he says.

Kabra believes silicon–perovskite tandem cells will certainly enter the market before 2030. “If India does not move fast, once again the Indian market will be flooded with Chinese products,” he cautions.

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Published on January 12, 2026



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A lesson from Germany on infrastructure maintenance

A lesson from Germany on infrastructure maintenance


TRAGIC NEGLECT: Morbi bridge collapse in Gujarat claimed 141 lives
| Photo Credit:
VIJAY SONEJI

In the early morning hours on September 11, 2024, a 100-m section of the Carola bridge, on the Elbe river in Dresden (Germany), fell into the water. Fortunately, there were no people on that section and no injuries were reported. The bridge, an important road and tram crossing, had shown signs of structural problems and was due for renovation; investigations later pointed to corrosion and material fatigue in the steel components as key factors for the failure.

The collapse disrupted traffic and river navigation, and led to a decision to demolish the remaining structure and plan for a replacement. But more importantly, the incident has since been cited as a wake-up call for improved monitoring and maintenance of ageing infrastructure the world over, especially in India — a country still grappling with the memories of the tragic collapse of the Morbi bridge in Gujarat on October 30, 2022, which caused 141 deaths.

The Fraunhofer Institute of Germany, which swung into action soon after the Dresden bridge collapse, has come out with the finding that monitoring infrastructure is not only simple and easy, but also quite cheap — all you need is the will to do it.

The problem statement before the institute ran like this: High precision, long service life, continuous load-bearing, temperature tolerant from minus 40 degrees Celsius to 120 degrees Celsius. Where will you find such a device?

The solution was hidden in plain sight. Of course, in automobiles, says Christoph Sohrmann, Group Manager at Fraunhofer Institute of Integrated Circuits (IIS). “We could try MEMS sensors, for example, which until now have only been used in vehicles or cellphones but can ‘hear’ breaks in the wires of pre-stressed concrete bridges,” he says in a Fraunhofer Institute press statement, adding, “We will soon be testing this principle on a real bridge.”

Cheaper option

The statement reasons that commercially available sensors for infrastructural monitoring are 10 to 100 times costlier than the repurposed vehicle sensor technology, since many elements such as hardware, production standards, cybersecurity and sensor self-monitoring can be leveraged directly from automotive applications.

Radar sensors developed for the automotive sector cannot be directly used for structural health monitoring (SHM) because they lack the resolution needed to detect small changes and early damage in large engineering structures. To address this, Fraunhofer researchers are developing new monitoring approaches using a combination of tactile sensors and non-contact radar measurements. These methods are being tested on a 45-m experimental bridge at TU Dresden’s real-world laboratory in Bautzen.

Unlike conventional frequency-based techniques, the phase-based interferometric radar analysis allows the researchers to detect even extremely small static displacements — down to millimetre or even sub-millimetre levels — as well as structural vibrations at frequencies above 1,000 Hz. This makes the technology suitable for monitoring structural conditions and early signs of damage.

The measurement campaigns are conducted in close collaboration with safety authorities and civil engineering offices to ensure that the data collected are both relevant and easy to interpret. Civil engineering expertise from TU Dresden played a key role in shaping the monitoring strategy.

In a follow-up project called RICARES, starting this month and funded by the Sächsische Aufbaubank, the team will focus on long-term monitoring of railway bridges, though the technology is also applicable to road bridges. The project will explore how many sensors can be synchronised and how radar performance can be improved using antennas, lenses, or reflectors.

The researchers emphasise that affordable sensors can enable large-scale infrastructure monitoring, helping authorities build long-term datasets that are crucial for identifying early structural damage and improving safety.

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Published on January 12, 2026



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Fabled city in the high mountains

Fabled city in the high mountains


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| Photo Credit:
LuFeeTheBear

Myth or not, the Lost City of Atlantis, described by the Greek philosopher Plato as having sunk deep into the Atlantic Ocean, has ceaselessly captivated our imagination. But the discovery of another lost city — one that existed until about a thousand years ago, high up in the almost uninhabitable mountains of Central Asia — has caused a massive stir in the world of archaeologists and historians.

Few lent credence to references in 10th century Arab texts to Marsmanda, located in the Tugunbulak highlands of Uzbekistan. It appeared near impossible that an ancient iron-making, industrial city could exist 7,200 ft above sea level, in what is today a barren landscape. That changed when Dr Michael D Frachetti, an archaeologist at Washington University in St Louis, went looking for relics of the Bronze Age people who lived in the region 4,000 years ago, but instead encountered thousands of mud-covered shards of broken pottery. Wow!

A drone equipped with LiDAR offered a clearer picture of what lay beneath. Soon, an ancient city began to reveal itself — around 150 buildings in a 35-acre area, possibly housing about 500 people.

The Smithsonian magazine reports that radiocarbon dating places the oldest excavated burial around 720 AD, while other finds suggest the region was among the earlier adopters of Islam, judging by burial practices.

The discovery of the fabled city of Marsmanda reminds us that archaeology has barely scratched the surface of history. Some day, even Atlantis may be found — who knows?

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Published on January 12, 2026



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Optimising bioreactor design

Optimising bioreactor design


In biotechnology, valuable products are produced by liquid cultures, where individual cells grow freely in a nutrient-rich medium. These cultures are called ‘cell suspensions’. In bioreactors, the suspensions are constantly shaken, creating certain hydrodynamics within the culture medium. This hydrodynamics affects the output quantity of the desired products, such as phytochemicals, proteins, enzymes and antibodies.

A problem before technologists is how to optimise the design of a bioreactor to maximise the production of useful products.

To address this, a team of scientists at IIT-Madras (Vidya Muthulakshmi Manickavasagam, Prof Nirav Bhatt and Prof Smita Srivastava) used computational fluid dynamics (CFD) to rationally design and select key features of a bioreactor, especially the impeller type, and the operating conditions, so that the hydrodynamic environment in the bioreactor would match the favourable conditions in shake flasks. By doing so, they addressed the drop in biomass productivity that usually occurs during scale-up from lab to industry.

Traditionally, bioreactor designs are selected through trial and error to match shake-flask productivity. This approach is inefficient for plant cells, which grow slowly and require long cultivation times. But the use of CFD enhanced efficiency.

Studying the medicinal plant Viola odorata, researchers modelled fluid flow in both shake flasks and bioreactors; they showed that maintaining “a constant shear environment” (forces created by one layer sliding over another) is crucial for preserving cell growth.

Overall, the study demonstrated that CFD offers a rational, time-saving way to design and scale up bioreactors for plant cell cultures, replacing inefficient trial-and-error methods.

Detox freshwater sponge

Freshwater sponges found in the Sundarban delta could play a significant role in monitoring and reducing toxic metal pollution, according to a new study by scientists at the Bose Institute, Kolkata. The research shows that these sponges can accumulate hazardous metals such as arsenic, lead and cadmium while hosting specialised microbial communities that help detoxify polluted water.

The study, published in Microbiology Spectrum of the American Society for Microbiology, examined freshwater sponges from the Sundarbans, a region facing increasing environmental stress from industrial and agricultural pollution. Freshwater sponges are among the earliest multicellular organisms and act as natural filters, processing large volumes of water and contributing to ecosystem health.

Led by Dr Abhrajyoti Ghosh of the Bose Institute’s Department of Biological Sciences, the research found that the microbial communities living within the sponges are distinct from those in the surrounding water. These microbes are shaped by sponge species and habitat, and enriched with genes linked to metal transport, metal resistance and antimicrobial resistance, indicating their role in surviving and detoxifying contaminated environments.

The study also represents the first detailed report on bacterial diversity in the freshwater sponges found in the Sundarbans. It was supported by a DST SERB national post-doctoral fellowship awarded to Dr Dhruba Bhattacharya.

Given the widespread heavy metal contamination across the Gangetic plain, the researchers say freshwater sponges could serve as effective bioindicators of water quality and natural tools for bioremediation. The findings open new possibilities for sustainable approaches to managing pollution in estuarine and freshwater ecosystems.

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Published on January 12, 2026



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Sensing UV-C in femtoseconds

Sensing UV-C in femtoseconds


We are familiar with ultraviolet-C (UV-C) light through its use in sterilising water, air and surfaces. But beyond this, UV-C light remains under-exploited, owing to challenges in creating compact systems capable of both generating and detecting intense, ultrafast UV-C light.

A recent study, titled ‘Fast ultraviolet-C photonics: Generating and sensing laser pulses on femtosecond timescales’, published by Dewes and colleagues in Light: Science & Applications, addresses this challenge directly. Combining advances in non-linear optics with scalable two-dimensional semiconductor sensors, the authors demonstrate an integrated platform capable of producing and detecting UV-C laser pulses lasting only a few hundred femtoseconds (a femtosecond is one quadrillionth of a second).

Ultrafast light

Many physical, chemical and biological processes unfold on timescales far shorter than a nanosecond. Ultrafast lasers, producing pulses lasting femtoseconds, help probe these processes. A femtosecond is short enough to resolve molecular vibrations, electronic transitions and ionisation dynamics.

Femtosecond lasers are now routine in the infrared and visible regions. But in the case of UV-C, direct sources such as excimer lasers are bulky and energy-intensive, while compact semiconductor lasers have limited output power. Detection poses an additional challenge, as conventional UV sensors often lack the speed or spectral discrimination needed for femtosecond operation.

femtosecond pulses

In the non-linear optical approach, the starting point is a commercially available ytterbium-based laser operating at 1,024 nanometres in the near-infrared. The pulses last 236 femtoseconds, with repetition rates of up to 60 kilohertz.

The conversion to UV-C proceeds through cascaded second-harmonic generation. Infrared pulses pass through a bismuth triborate crystal, and their frequency is doubled to produce visible light at 512 nanometres. The frequency is doubled again in a beta-barium borate crystal, yielding ultraviolet pulses at 256 nanometres. Harmonic separators suppress residual infrared and visible light, ensuring a clean UV-C output.

Through careful optimisation of crystal thickness and spacing, the authors achieve a fourth-harmonic conversion efficiency of about 20 per cent. For a compact femtosecond system, this is exceptionally high. The resulting UV-C pulses have durations of around 243 femtoseconds and energies of up to 2.38 microjoules.

2D semiconductors

For detection, the authors have developed photodetectors based on two-dimensional semiconductors — gallium selenide, which has a high absorption coefficient in the UV-C range, allowing even nanometre-scale layers to absorb light efficiently, and gallium oxide, which exhibits enhanced selectivity for UV-C wavelengths and suppressed sensitivity to visible light.

The detectors use a metal–semiconductor–metal geometry with interdigitated gold electrodes. In the gallium oxide devices, the semiconductor layer is integrated with graphene on a silicon-carbide substrate. When a UV-C pulse is absorbed, electron–hole pairs are generated and separated by an applied electric field, producing a measurable photocurrent.

The gallium selenide devices show a linear relationship between the UV-C pulse energy and the integrated photocurrent, indicating a stable and predictable response over a wide operating range.

By contrast, the gallium oxide devices exhibit an unusual super-linear response. As the pulse energy or repetition rate increases, the detector responsivity rises more rapidly than expected.

The authors attribute this to electronic processes within the semiconductor and at its interface with graphene. As a result, detector performance improves under stronger illumination, which is valuable for ultrafast applications.

High-impact uses

In biomedical imaging and diagnostics, the short wavelength of UV-C light enables spatial resolution beyond the limits of visible microscopy, while femtosecond pulses allow time-resolved observation of rapid biochemical processes such as protein dynamics, DNA damage and photo-induced cellular responses.

In materials science and semiconductor manufacturing, ultrafast UV-C spectroscopy provides direct access to electronic structure, defect states and charge recombination dynamics in wide-bandgap materials and oxides.

The ultrashort pulses enable nanoscale fabrication and repair without significant heat diffusion, detection of trace pollutants and hazardous substances, and portable systems for laboratory-on-chip applications.

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Published on January 12, 2026



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ISRO to kick off 2026 with launch of Earth Observation Satellite

ISRO to kick off 2026 with launch of Earth Observation Satellite


The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is getting ready to launch the PSLV-C62 mission carrying the EOS-N1 Earth Observation satellite along with 15 co-passenger satellites from domestic & international customers on Monday.

The mission is the ninth dedicated commercial mission undertaken by NewSpace India Limited (NSIL), the commercial arm of the space organisation.

This launch will be the 64th flight of the Polar Satellite launch Vehicle(PSLV) – a workhorse of ISRO’s notable missions like Chandrayaan-1, Mars Orbiter Mission, Aditya-L1 and Astrosat Mission. 

The mission will carry satellites from Indian start-ups like Dhruva Aerospace and OrbitAID Aerospace’s AayulSAT, an experimental payload to demonstrate in-orbit satellite refueling technology.

PSLV-C62 mission will also demonstrate a small-scale prototype of a re-entry vehicle called the Kestrel Initial Technology Demonstrator (KID) developed by Spanish start-up Orbital Paradigm. The KID will be the last co-passenger to be injected after which it is slated to re-enter the earth’s atmosphere towards splashdown in the South Pacific Ocean.

The PSLV-C62 mission is set to lift-off on January 12, 2026 at 10:17am, from the First Launch Pad at Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota.

Published on January 11, 2026



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