HZB receives funding to make innovations usable more quickly

The experimental hall of the BESSY II light source in Berlin-Adlershof. Accelerator-based investigation methods are available here, they are also used for research on solar cells.

The experimental hall of the BESSY II light source in Berlin-Adlershof. Accelerator-based investigation methods are available here, they are also used for research on solar cells. © HZB/Kevin Fuchs

The Helmholtz Association has selected three new innovation platforms that will now be funded. HZB is involved in two of them: The Innovation Platform on Accelerator Technologies HI-ACTS is intended to open up modern accelerators for a wide range of applications, while the Innovation Platform Solar TAP is intended to bring new ideas from the laboratories of photovoltaics research more quickly into an application. In total, HZB will receive 4.2 million euros in grants from the Pact for Research and Innovation over the next three years.


Innovation platforms create access to ideas and fascinating infrastructures, facilitating exchange between research centres as well as external interested parties. To create new structures for technology transfer and the joint use of large-scale equipment, research infrastructures and data, the Helmholtz Association is now funding three new innovation platforms, on accelerator technology, photovoltaics and ocean research.

HZB will receive a total of 4.2 million euros in grants from the Pact for Research and Innovation over the next three years, plus its own funds. Following a positive interim evaluation in 2025, funding for these innovation platforms can be made permanent.

Accelerator technologies for all: HI-ACTS

HI-ACTS: Helmholtz Innovation Platform for Accelerator-based Technologies & Solutions

In medicine, particle accelerators help in the development of novel tumour therapies or drugs; in materials research, the spectrum ranges from high-performance semiconductors to novel and more sustainable materials. However, until now access to particle accelerators has been costly.

With the HI-ACTS innovation platform, the Helmholtz Centres Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY, the Helmholtz Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf, the Helmholtz Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie, the Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung and the Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon want to open up their accelerator technologies to industry, science and society and make them accessible. This should lead to marketable solutions for materials research, medicine but also the energy industry. At the same time, the facilities can be further improved so that they can be used for a broader range of applications in the long term. "HI-ACTS gives HZB the chance to implement long-planned improvements in our user coordination," says Dr Paul Harten, Head of the Technology Transfer Department.


Fast, flexible energy from the sun: Solar TAP

Solar Tap: Technology Acceleration Platform for emerging Photovoltaics


In order to achieve the climate goals in Germany and Europe, renewable energies must be massively expanded. For photovoltaics (PV) - i.e. energy from the sun - this means that solar modules would have to cover about two to four per cent of the land area. In addition to the construction of new large-scale solar parks, this requires the increased dual use of existing areas: Flexible and even more efficient PV systems can be installed on existing infrastructure.

With the Solar TAP innovation platform, Forschungszentrum Jülich, Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin and Karlsruhe Institute of Technology are developing new PV modules made of printed solar panels. Users can freely shape and design the modules - depending on their needs. This creates new options for the expansion of photovoltaics in agriculture, in the building sector and also on transport routes.

At HZB, several large research teams are working on photovoltaics based on perovskite semiconductors, which can also be produced by printing processes and at low temperatures. This enables the coating of flexible substrate materials. HZB is internationally known for world records in the efficiency of tandem cells with perovskites.

The Solar TAP innovation platform is intended to make new technologies quickly and easily accessible to industry, society and end users. "Innovations are constantly coming out of research, and we want to transfer them more systematically to industrial production," says Prof. Dr Eva Unger, who heads the Solution Processes for Hybrid Materials and Devices department at HZB.

arö

  • Copy link

You might also be interested in

  • Rutger Schlatmann re-elected as ETIP PV Chair
    News
    24.10.2024
    Rutger Schlatmann re-elected as ETIP PV Chair
    The European Technology and Innovation Platform for Photovoltaics (ETIP PV) was created by the European Commission in order to promote photovoltaic technologies and industries in Europe. Now, the ETIP PV Steering Committee elected a new Chair, as well as two Vice-Chairs for the term 2024 – 2026. Rutger Schlatmann, head of the division Solar Energy at the HZB, and professor at HTW Berlin, was re-elected as the ETIP PV Chair.
  • Perovskite solar cells: TEAM PV develops reproducibility and comparability
    News
    22.10.2024
    Perovskite solar cells: TEAM PV develops reproducibility and comparability
    Ten teams at Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin are building a long-term international alliance to converge practices and develop reproducibility and comparability in perovskite materials. The TEAM PV project is funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF), Germany.
  • HZB patent for semiconductor characterisation goes into serial production
    News
    10.10.2024
    HZB patent for semiconductor characterisation goes into serial production
    An HZB team has developed together with Freiberg Instruments an innovative monochromator that is now being produced and marketed. The device makes it possible to quickly and continuously measure the optoelectronic properties of semiconductor materials with high precision over a broad spectral range from the near infrared to the deep ultraviolet. Stray light is efficiently suppressed. This innovation is of interest for the development of new materials and can also be used to better control industrial processes.