| Solar Efficiency Record Broken |
| Written by Hank Green | ||
| Friday, 15 August 2008 | ||
|
Generally these efficiency gains aren't all that important to the future of the solar economy. Yes, it's a new world record, but the photovoltaic modules that are most economical are only like 20% efficient. They're better because they're cheaper...and these record-breaking panels are NEVER cheap. But this one is worth talking about. Scientists at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Colorado eeked that extra fraction of a percent out using a few very interesting techniques. Highly efficient solar cells have to split light into segments and then capture each hunk of wavelengths separately. This lets the panel be efficient across a wide spectrum. This new chip uses an entirely different system to split the wavelengths (gallium indium arsenide and gallium indium phosphide...if you're curious.) The result is a much thinner and lighter solar cell that could even possibly be flexible. The chips is also optimally efficient under concentrated sunlight. Concentrated sunlight is preferable because large areas of light can be concentrated on small areas of photovoltaic material. And since the PV material (especially this ultra-efficient stuff) is extremely expensive, using less per unit of sunlight captured is way better. In short, this isn't just another tiny bump in efficiency, it's an entirely new solar cell, and one that could be very useful not just for satellites, but also for utility scale solar. Though, to be fair, the path to the commercial market is always pretty arduous for these new solar technologies.
Comments
(9)
Hmm, not much gain
written by The Food Monster , August 15, 2008
Actually, could very very exciting
written by cameron , August 15, 2008
Although little gain in efficiency. The fact there is a whole different approach is a very cool development. This allow for many more options for high-efficiency solar cells to come to market.
DARPA Already Did IT
written by Faust , August 17, 2008
It's called PRISM, and they separated light to more sensitive PV cells.
If DARPA already did it ...
written by the english guy , August 17, 2008
...then where the hell is it? One of the best inventions that we -really- need, which you say DARPA has "done", and it's nowhere to be seen.
Nice
written by Jimmy Washington , August 17, 2008
Dude that is absolutely amazing! Once again you ahve hit the nail on the head!
JW www.anondo.alturl.com
Good to see continued development in sol
written by Steve Jones , August 17, 2008
Sometimes a technology can be advanced long-term by a lateral movement. It might be easier to make even more gains against a newer design. I'm hoping you guys pickup more efficiency and make going solar truly cost-effective.
Hmm
written by Marc , August 17, 2008
Wake me up when I can buy solar at home depot for less than $500 and it will power my house.
The Internet Delivers
written by The internet , August 17, 2008
DIY solar
written by solarnetwork , August 27, 2008
why isn't PV sold at Home Depot anyway? anyway here's an open source project that's kind of fun:
http://www.solarnetwork.net/ | ||
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-The Food Monster
http://thefoodmonsterblog.blogspot.com