Roadmap on photovoltaic absorber materials for sustainable energy conversion

A compilation of agrivolataics based on organic photovoltaics

Photovoltaics (PVs) are a critical technology for curbing growing levels of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, and meeting increases in future demand for low-carbon electricity.

In order to fulfil ambitions for net-zero carbon dioxide equivalent (CO<sub>2</sub>eq) emissions worldwide, the global cumulative capacity of solar PVs must increase by an order of magnitude from 0.9 TWp in 2021 to 8.5 TWp by 2050 according to the International Renewable Energy Agency, which is considered to be a highly conservative estimate.  

In 2020, the Henry Royce Institute brought together the UK PV community to discuss the critical technological and infrastructure challenges which need to be be overcome to address the vast challenges in accelerating PV deployment.  In the 'Roadmap on photovoltaic absorber materials for sustainable energy conversion' the authors examine the key developments in the global community, especially the progress made in the field since this earlier roadmap, bringing together experts primarily from the UK across the breadth of the photovoltaics community.  The focus is both on the challenges in improving the efficiency, stability and levelised cost of electricity of current technologies for utility-scale PVs, as well as the fundamental questions in novel technologies that can have a significant impact on emerging markets, such as indoor PVs, space PVs and agrivoltaics.

The authors discuss challenges in advanced technology and computational tools, as well as the growing synergies between PVs and solar fuels, and offer a perspective on the environmental sustainability of the PV industry.  Through this roadmap the authors emphasise promising pathways forward in both the short and long terms, and for communities working on technologies across a range of maturity levels to learn from each other.