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A device for simultaneously converting the sun’s light and heat into electricity
Posted on August 12th, 2010 1 comment
Researchers have demonstrated a new mechanism for converting both sunlight and heat into electricity.A new type of device that uses both heat and light from the sun should be more efficient than conventional solar cells, which convert only the light into electricity.
The device relies on a physical principle discovered and demonstrated by researchers at Stanford University. In their prototype, the energy in sunlight excites electrons in an electrode, and heat from the sun coaxes the excited electrons to jump across a vacuum into another electrode, generating an electrical current. The device could be designed to send waste heat to a steam engine and convert 50 percent of the energy in sunlight into electricity–a huge improvement over conventional solar cells. Read the rest of this entry »
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Solar panels are cheap enough to become a major component of green energy
Posted on June 23rd, 2010 1 comment
The United States has supported research into photovoltaics for almost 40 years, recently with a 30 percent investment tax credit. Japan instituted incentives in the 1990s, when photovoltaics cost at least five times as much as residential electricity. In the new millennium, Germany instituted incentives an order of magnitude larger. Read the rest of this entry » -
Dow Chemical readies easy-to-install solar roofs
Posted on January 20th, 2010 No comments
Dow Chemical is moving full speed ahead to develop roof shingles embedded with photovoltaic cells. To facilitate the move, the U.S. Department of Energy has backed Dow’s efforts with a $17.8 million tax credit that will help the company launch an initial market test of the product later this year.In October 2009, the chemical giant unveiled its product, which can be nailed to a roof like ordinary shingles by roofers without the help of specially trained solar installers or electricians. The solar shingles will cost 30 to 40 percent less than other solar-embedded building materials and 10 percent less than the combined costs of conventional roofing materials and rack-mounted solar panels, according to company officials. Read the rest of this entry »
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Thin-film solar cells on flexible steel sheets
Posted on June 5th, 2009 No comments
Xunlight, a startup in Toledo, Ohio, has developed a way to make large, flexible solar panels. It has developed a roll-to-roll manufacturing technique that forms thin-film amorphous silicon solar cells on thin sheets of stainless steel. Each solar module is about one meter wide and five and a half meters long.


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