Swedish solar technology innovators Henrik Lindström and Giovanni Fili receive European Inventor Award 2021 in the “SMEs” category
- European Patent Office (EPO) honours Swedish inventors for developing dye-sensitised solar cells that can be free form-printed in almost any shape or colour
- The versatile cells can be integrated into various electronics to create self-charging devices that generate electricity from all forms of light, both indoors and outdoors
- The solar cells are expected to debut soon in self-charging devices, such as bike helmets and wireless headphones
Munich, 17 June 2021 - The European Patent Office (EPO) today honoured Swedish innovators Henrik Lindström and Giovanni Fili with the European Inventor Award in the "SMEs" category at a digital ceremony. Their invention - a thin, flexible dye-sensitised solar cell that harvests electricity extremely efficiently and can be custom-printed in almost any texture, shape or colour - can be integrated into a wide range of electronic devices.
"With their flexible solar cells, Henrik Lindström and Giovanni Fili have spearheaded the drive towards the development of next generation self-charging electronic devices," said EPO President António Campinos. "With robust patent protection behind them, they are at the cutting-edge of this pioneering solar cell technology, which has the potential to change how we use electronics and play a significant role in reducing carbon emissions."
The 2021 European Inventor Award ceremony was held digitally and, for the first time, was open to the public who tuned in from around the world. The Award, one of Europe's most prestigious innovation prizes, is presented annually by the EPO to outstanding inventors from Europe and beyond who have made an exceptional contribution to society, technological progress and economic growth. The finalists and winners in five categories (Industry, Research, SMEs, Non-EPO countries and Lifetime achievement) were selected by an independent international jury.
Solar powering everyday life
Scientist Henrik Lindström and entrepreneur Giovanni Fili combined their complementary skills and expertise to pioneer the production of an innovative solar cell technology, and successfully commercialise their invention.
In 2008 Fili founded the company Exeger, with the aim of bringing to market highly promising dye-sensitised solar cells (DSSCs), which at the time were still commercially unviable. This was the same technology that Lindström had successfully reproduced in 1994, during his PhD at Uppsala University. Convinced by Fili's vision, Lindström became the start-up's Chief Technology Officer in 2009.
DSSCs usually feature a transparent substrate plate topped with a conductive oxide material (indium tin oxide). The cost of these materials however has limited their commercial viability. Lindström and Fili's breakthrough was finding a way of replacing these expensive and inefficient materials with a new electrode material that offers 1 000 times higher conductivity.
One distinguishing feature of their innovation is that the electrode is located directly behind the light absorbing layer. This means that more light reaches the cell, and more electrical current is generated. Secondly, screen printing was chosen as the ideal manufacturing method, opening up new possibilities in design integration.
Lindstrom says: "It's thin, flexible and efficient; when applied to any device, that device can create its own electricity, like in photosynthesis." Fili adds: "We will never need to charge our headphones or e-readers or other devices again, they will recharge themselves from ambient light, even indoors."
Their invention, called Powerfoyle®, was first integrated into bike helmets that use self-charging lights, and several potential uses are currently being researched. These include powering smartphones, and installation on surfaces such as façades, rooftops and windows. The company currently employs 140 staff at its factory in Stockholm and plans to begin construction on a second plant with tenfold capacity later this year to enable them to enter many more markets.
Notes to the editor
About the inventors
Dr Henrik Lindström was born in Uppsala, Sweden, on 17 April 1967. Lindström studied undergraduate chemistry at Uppsala University. While working on his first PhD in batteries and DSSC solar cells research at Uppsala University, he became the first scientist to produce a solar cell on a flexible plastic substrate. Lindström also worked as a postdoctoral scientist at the National Institute for Materials Science in Tsukuba, Japan (2005-2007). From June 2007 to January 2009, Lindström worked as an industrial researcher for the nanotechnology firm NTERA, Inc., in Dublin, inventing methods for manufacturing reflective monolithic electrochromic displays. In 2009, he took his current role as Exeger CTO.
Giovanni Fili was born in Hällefors, Sweden, on 5 February 1976. Fili completed an MSc in Business and Administration at Stockholm School of Economics in 2002. He then focused on private investments in real estate and was a founding partner and board chairman of numerous real estate development companies. After holding positions in the Swedish Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) in 2007, he founded the DSSC company NLAB Solar AB (now Exeger) in the autumn of 2008. Fili also co-founded the diabetes treatment start-up Atrogi AB in 2013, and sits on the board of the medtech firm Sigrid Therapeutics AB. He is an advisory board member for the Stockholm Innovation & Growth forum and a founding board member and investor at Molindo Energy AB, a Stockholm-based energy sector investment company. Fili is the CEO of Exeger.
Henrik Lindström and Giovanni Fili are named in six and five European patents respectively, including the nomination-related patent EP2625703, which was granted in 2018.
About the European Inventor Award
The European Inventor Award is one of Europe's most prestigious innovation prizes. Launched by the EPO in 2006, it honours individual inventors and teams of inventors whose pioneering inventions provide answers to some of the biggest challenges of our times. The finalists and winners are selected by an independent jury consisting of international authorities from the fields of business, politics, science, academia and research who examine the proposals for their contribution towards technical progress, social development, economic prosperity and job creation in Europe. The Award is conferred in five categories (Industry, Research, SMEs, Non-EPO countries and Lifetime achievement). In addition, the public selects the winner of the Popular Prize from among the 15 finalists through online voting.
About the EPO
With 6 400 staff, the European Patent Office (EPO) is one of the largest public service institutions in Europe. Headquartered in Munich with offices in Berlin, Brussels, The Hague and Vienna, the EPO was founded with the aim of strengthening co-operation on patents in Europe. Through the EPO's centralised patent granting procedure, inventors are able to obtain high-quality patent protection in up to 44 countries, covering a market of some 700 million people. The EPO is also the world's leading authority in patent information and patent searching.
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