Spheral Solar Technology Approaching Reality 23
CactusMan writes: "A technology previously owned by Texas Instruments and then Ontario Hydro, Spheral Solar Technology is 'a low-cost alternative [to conventional solar cell technologies] involving flexible, lightweight solar cells comprised of thousands of tiny silicon spheres in an aluminum foil, which can be "formed and applied to virtually any curved or flat surface."' Automated Tooling Systems has just received $29.5 million (Canadian) to bring the technology to commercial viability. Read the article here or go directly to the Spheral site."
excellent (Score:1)
Travelling to the sun in a sphere (Score:1)
Re:excellent (Score:1)
Tinfoil hats in now in! (Score:2)
So why didn't Orwell see that one?
Re:Tinfoil hats in now in! (Score:1)
Geek foil hats, but now with spinning propellers (Score:1)
Efficiency? (Score:2)
I searched up and down on the site and found some really cool stuff. It's very light and very durable, but no specs. Normally when someone talks about a new solar panel, they mention the efficiency. I'm worried it might be really low, so they hid it.
I've been wishing for low cost solar panels all my life.
Re:Efficiency? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Efficiency? 40% is BS (Score:1, Informative)
The stupid thing about PV research is that more money gets put into chasing the percentages with wierd compounds rather than trying to achieve something that is useful.
The Aussies have the solar challenge - a showcase for PV. Unfortunately, again, the focus is on spending bazzillions of dollars in making expensive cars - which does not help make PV a real-world energy solution.
Re:Efficiency? 40% is BS (Score:1)
High efficiency, high cost PV cells are useful, in two applications: (1) on spacecraft, and (2) in concentrator systems with high (500x, say) concentration factors. For the latter you want to get as much energy as you can to defray the cost of the optics and tracking hardware, so you want the PV cells to be as efficient as possible (and since the concentration is so high you can afford to spend a lot per unit cell area.)
Gallium arsenside is also useful in space because it can be made much thinner (hence, lighter) than silicon, and because it doesn't lose efficiency so quickly as it gets hot (for spacecraft on solar orbits bringing them closer to the Sun than 1 AU).
Even... (Score:2)
The problem isn't so much the efficiency of current cells as it is the cost.
Re:Who cares: only energy pay-back counts (Score:1)
Re:Who cares: only energy pay-back counts (Score:1)
Re:Efficiency? (Score:1)
I was just worried the panels might have about 1% efficiency. You have to admit that at some point it becomes silly to even bother.
That said, I think 8-10% is great (maybe higher as they refine the process). Why don't they admit it up front? Since the rest looks pretty cheap to make, lets hope they have a cheap way to make little silicon balls, because I'm going to need lost of electricity to run my cheap digital wall paper (another dream I hope to see in my lifetime).
Re:Efficiency? (Score:1)
I'm going to need lost of electricity to run my cheap digital wall paper (another dream I hope to see in my lifetime).
OK. Your wait may be near and end. The floppy TV is coming. [com.com]
Was it just me ... (Score:1)
I have been on