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Perovskite photovoltaic : A review of the patent landscape - 2017 Q4

In just over six years more than 1,400 patents covering over 1,000 patent families have been filed by over 200 academic assignees and more than 200 commercial assignees


6 Nov 2017 | Editor

cintelliq is pleased to announce their latest release of their "Perovskite photovoltaic : A review of the patent landscape." This report will enable you to identify the leading organisations filing perovskite device, process, and materials patents, when they filed, what patents have been granted, what are the main technology areas where filings have occurred, and which industry sectors are the most active.

Perovskite solar cell developments are progressing fast

Since 2010 there has been significant and rapid progress in the development of perovskite photovoltaic technologies. Companies like Oxford Photovoltiacs and Greatcell (nee Dyesol) are moving ever closer towards early commercialisation of production ready perovskite solar cells.

Perovskite photovoltaics may be an emerging technology but in terms of power conversion efficiency perovskite it has already achieved more that 20% for cells and are seen as a serious competitor to the industry standard silicon based solar cells, given the many companies and research institutions increasing their investments in this technology there is a confident expectation that efficiencies could reach 30% in the not too distance future.

Early perovskite solar cells to be commercialised will be built on glass substrates, the long-term ambitions of the industry will see perovskite devices built on flexible plastic substrates.

Given their high efficiencies made possible with perovskite solar cells it is easy to envisage them being used in many conventional applications like building integrated pv, portable charging and energy harvesting.

Recent research published demonstrated that it is now possible to fabricate perovskite devices on paper substrates - leading to the possibility of designing and manufacturing clothes that can power wearable devices.

What is clear is perovskite solar cells will enter the market within the next few years, and have a viable and long-term commercial future.

Understanding and tracking perovskite technology is important

Currently, technology development is focused on improving the operational lifetimes, device and module efficiencies, developing new device architectures, synthesising new materials, developing new deposition techniques, developing manufacturing processes and applications.

In order to gain competitive advantage companies and research institutions are actively filing patents as they seek to secure IP space they own and can commercialise.

The rapid technology progress means there is an increasing number of patent filings. Understanding this technology and commercial progress can be achieved with a review of the patent landscape.

Perovskite patents filings are growing rapidly

In just over six years more than 1,400 patents covering over 1,000 patent families have been filed by over 200 academic assignees and more than 200 commercial assignees.

Filings from Chinese academics have grown in recent years, while many hold a single patent, what may be unexpected is more than 34 Chinese academics hold five or more patents.

The number of patents being granted is growing, with academia accounting for over 60% of these early granted patents.

Note: The perovskite patent landscape report includes patents published up until end of September 2017.

The perovskite patent landscape an invaluable insight to technology and commercial developments of the industry Our latest patent landscape report provides an solid review of perovskite technology and commercial developments - an invaluable guide to this latest emerging solar cell technology.

With this report you will learn:

  • What inventions are being patented
  • What companies and research institutions are filing patents
  • How patent filings are developing over time, regionally and by industry
  • How is the early industry shaping-up
  • What are the technology groups being protected - devices, materials or processes
  • Who has filed early patents
  • Who are the key assignees
  • What are the patent portfolio held by key assignees
  • Who has already received granted patents
  • What are the technologies covered by these granted patents
  • What regional differences are emerging and how could this change over time
  • What patents are already being cited - only perovskite related or others

Assignees included in the report and the dataset

● isis innovation ltd ● sekisui chemical co ltd ● oxford pv ● fujifilm corp ● hunt energy enterprises ● huazhong university of science and technology ● ecole polytechnique federale de lausanne ● lg chem ltd ● bohai university ● korea research ● institute of chemical technology ● institute of physics ● chinese academy of sciences ● chengdu new keli chemical science co ltd ● peccell technologies inc ● research and business foundation sungkyunkwan university ● wuhan university ● north china electric power university ● soochow university ● tosoh corp ● toshiba corp ● seiko epson corp ● panasonic corp ● national institute for materials science ● national cheng kung university ● commonwealth scientific and industrial research organisation ● research and business foundation sungkyunkwan university ● global frontier center for multiscale energy systems ● shanghai institute of ceramics ● chinese academy of sciences ● greatcell (dyesol) ... and many more

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About cintelliq

cintelliq has been providing research to our clients since 2003 on a wide range of organic semiconductor and organic electronic technologies, our understanding, knowledge and ability to provide clients with relevant information is unmatched.

Source: cintelliq