Abstract

Olga Malinkiewicz was sitting in a meeting with investors earlier this year when it hit her just how far her company, Saule Technologies, has come. Her colleague was presenting a short status report on Saule’s production facility, set to output its first products later this year. Since the firm’s founding in 2014, “we worked so much that I never had time to think about [our progress],” Malinkiewicz says, “but when you step back and see it from a distance, it is crazy, crazy fast.” Based in Warsaw and Wrocław, Poland, Saule aims to commercialize thin, flexible perovskite solar cells that can be affixed anywhere that heavy, crystalline silicon panels can’t, like on curved surfaces and portable devices. Becoming an entrepreneur was not something Malinkiewicz ever thought she would do, she says, but a series of fortunate events has led her here. Saule arose from a discovery made by Malinkiewicz during

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