4.8 Article

Thin-Film Photovoltaic Cells: Long-Term Metal(loid) Leaching at Their End-of-Life

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 47, Issue 22, Pages 13151-13159

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es402969c

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Funding

  1. European Commission [EC 287594]

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The photovoltaic effect of thin-film copper indium gallium selenide cells (CIGS) is conferred by the latter elements. Organic photovoltaic cells (OPV), relying on organic light-absorbing molecules, also contain a variety of metals (e.g., Zn, Al, In, Sn, Ag). The environmental impact of such technologies is largely unknown, in particular when the physical integrity deteriorates upon end-of-life, possibly facilitating cell constituent leaching. This study analyzed long-term inorganic leaching from damaged OPV and CIGS into different model waters. Leachate concentrations were put into perspective by calculating the predicted environmental concentrations (PEC) for several scenarios. Roof-top acidic rain runoff from CIGS was found to be the predominant emission source for metals and metalloids, with Cd released to such extents that PEC (173.4 mu g Cd L-1) would considerably exceed acute toxicity concentrations Daphnia magna. Other PEC for CIGS (9.9 mg Mo L-1 and 9.4 mu g Se L-1) were in the range of teratogenic effects. In contrast, OPV released little metals with calculated PEC being below even conservative drinking water guidelines. Time-resolved single-particle ICP-MS indicated that some metals (Zn, Mo, Ag) were in nanoparticulate form, raising nanotoxicity concerns. Leaching kinetics called for revision of existing standardized (accelerated) leaching protocols because long-term release was most relevant.

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