While solar panels use mostly common materials with very low toxicity—glass and aluminum account for over 90 percent of a solar panel's mass—silicon-based solar panels use trace elements of lead for antireflective coating and metallization on solar cells. While solar panels use mostly common materials with very low toxicity—glass and aluminum account for over 90 percent of a solar panel's mass—silicon-based solar panels use trace elements of lead for antireflective coating and metallization on solar cells. Building-integrated photovoltaics (BIPV) are photovoltaic materials that are used to replace conventional building materials in parts of the building envelope such as the roof, skylights, or façades. They are increasingly being incorporated into the construction of new buildings as a principal or. Treating solar technology as a material rather than an attachment reshapes how architecture is conceived and detailed. Color, texture, rhythm, and assembly become inseparable from performance. Building-Integrated Photovoltaics (BIPV) operate within this expanded definition of materiality. When used, these materials come in very small quantities, and they are sealed in high-strength encapsulants that prevent chemical leaching, even when solar panels have been crushed or exposed to extreme heat or rainwater. It's a growing technology and more products, such as solar shingles, tiles, canopies, bricks, siding, sunlights, and windows, are available.