Solar Cells Get Boost 108
An anonymous reader writes "Researchers from Los Alamos National Laboratory have tapped the efficiencies of nanotechnology to double solar cells' potential energy production. The key to the method is the use of lead selenium nanocrystals which can produce 2 electrons where 1 was produced before. Other optical applications can also benefit."
Will this work with other materials? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Will this work with other materials? (Score:3, Interesting)
If so, it should multiply efficiency. I would love to see multi-band gap using 2-3 times wider percentage of the light to move multiple electrons. You should be able to pull 80%+ efficiency if that is possible.
Someone contribute some understanding
Re:Will this work with other materials? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Will this work with other materials? (Score:2)
Re:Will this work with other materials? (Score:2)
Apparently for very large values ^H^H^H^H^H^H overclocking....
Re:Will this work with other materials? (Score:4, Informative)
I'm on shaky ground here, but I think the answer is likely "no". The idea behind this technique is that you can use surplus energy from a photon absorption event to release a second electron, while the point of split bandgap cells is that you can absorb light with less surplus energy (more deposited in a useful manner into the first electron).
Ask a semiconductor physicist to get the correct answer
If I had a nickel... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:If I had a nickel... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:If I had a nickel... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:If I had a nickel... (Score:3, Interesting)
Got any names or links?
Re:If I had a nickel... (Score:2, Informative)
It seems the parent site doesn't like linking to the actual search results only the heading, Que Sera Sera
Re:If I had a nickel... (Score:2)
I managed to find a few links that talk about buildings that use/will use solar-powered AC, but they skim over the background: Duke [newbernsj.com] | Some House [theage.com.au]
Here are are a couple of commerical solar-powered AC units: Coolmax [mx.com.au] | Solacool [partsonsale.com]
You can find some more links if you google solar-powered air conditioning [google.com].
Re:If I had a nickel... (Score:2)
Thanks for the links!
Re:If I had a nickel... (Score:2)
at night too. Too bad there's not a way to generate
electric power from high humidity.
Re:If I had a nickel... (Score:1, Interesting)
electric power from high humidity.
Sure there is. Collect all the condensation on top of a skyscraper and use it to power a turbine down at the bottom of the building
Re:If I had a nickel... (Score:2)
Re:If I had a nickel... (Score:2, Interesting)
That's what the batteries / capacitors are for...
And if you live in St. Petersburg, Russia, it's far enough north for them to have white nights.
Re:If I had a nickel... (Score:3, Insightful)
There is little market for gas turbines at the comsumer level or hydroelectric systems but they are still important.
Solar panels are finding more wide spread uses all the time. They are very popular with Amature radion operators. Heck I can even buy them at my local Harbor Freight store.
Here. Have twenty nickels, buy a clue. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Here. Have twenty nickels, buy a clue. (Score:2)
Distinction (Score:3, Insightful)
evolution (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Net metering.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Although it sounds fine, it really is a problem for the power companies; retail rates not only include generation costs, but the huge effort that goes on in transmission and load balancing. To be realistic, this sort of metering should be generation costs only.
Net metering is good, but not perfect (Score:2)
Why? Power backfed at the customer site can be sold to another customer on the same distribution line. The utility isn't losing anything. Besides, if you demand that the utility be granted all the benefits of the customer's generation you guarantee underinvestment by the customer no matter how much sense it makes to the system as a whole.
padding (Score:2)
Re:If I had a nickel... (Score:3, Interesting)
Electrons are not "produced" by solar cells (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Electrons are not "produced" by solar cells (Score:5, Informative)
Second, the description does not say that the electrons are being created at all. The dictionary definition [reference.com] of the word produce indicates, in the first entry, that produce means "To bring forth; yield", which is good enough, but skim the third entry and its example, "To bring forth; exhibit: reached into a pocket and produced a packet of matches". I think the first is more accurate, but the second indicates just how far the definition of produce does not imply creation.
=Brian
The holy grail of solar power (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The holy grail of solar power (Score:2)
No...it's not the "holy grail" (Score:2)
However, the houses, you might
Re:No...it's not the "holy grail" (Score:1, Interesting)
You can later, when it gets dark, use a hydrogen fuel cell. Indirect solar energy. Dense energy
storage.
You do realize that nearly 100% of the energy used on this planet is supplied by the sun, right?
Re:No...it's not the "holy grail" (Score:1)
Re:No...it's not the "holy grail" (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:No...it's not the "holy grail" (Score:3, Interesting)
Now there simply isn't enough energy in sunlight to power a car with solar panels. (If there was, we'd all be crispy critters.) But if you can store that energy up over a period of time, you can make your car much more efficient, perhaps even indepe
Re:No...it's not the "holy grail" (Score:1)
Re:No...it's not the "holy grail" (Score:2)
Actually, I was more concerned with parking garages than home garages. The majority of city cars spend a lot of time in the deep, dark bowels of these things.
You can have more surface area, and you won't have the dent in the aerodynamic and weight efficiency with having all those solar panels on a car.
If the panels are built into the frame, it's not a big deal. Having a black top instead of (insert car color here) might put a dent in its style,
holy ostrich, Batman (Score:2)
Re:The holy grail of solar power (Score:1, Flamebait)
No it's not. (Score:5, Interesting)
If we get really lucky, this technology will work well at high light flux and high temperatures (~100 C). This would allow use of concentrating collectors and use of the waste heat for space heat and domestic hot water, multiplying the benefit of the collector and making the whole affair much more economical. Imagine a house that powers its own appliances, stores enough hot water for several days of hot showers and its own heating load, and on sunny days has plenty of juice left over to feed to electric cars. This house would be almost completely independent of fossil fuels and offset fuel use elsewhere, and I'll bet that we could build it now if cost was no object - if we can get 50% or even 40% efficient solar cells at $2/watt working at 100 C, we'll be there.
Why not just run a turbine? (Score:2)
Couldn't comment on the efficiency of a home grown system, but utility solar thermal systems have been more efficient (30% or so) at producing electricity than photovoltaics for a long time now, must be decades.
Re:No it's not. (Score:2)
I drive a 3000lb Sport Compact, with about a 170hp engine. There's 746 watts per hp, so that's 127KW of electricity needed for the equivalent performance. A good PV panel produces 4-6W of power per square foot in full sunlight. My car is about 15 feet long and 5.8 feet wide, giving a total horizontal surface area of about 87 square feet. If the enti
Re:No it's not. (Score:2)
Re:No it's not. (Score:2)
Anyway, I'm not disputing your main point; I've seen writeups for several electric cars that have terrific 0-60mph specs/torque figures. And you can see some that plainly have a flat torque curve across their operating range, which means not just awesome
Yes, it is. Numbers and mild rant follow. (Score:2)
Re:Yes, it is. Numbers and mild rant follow. (Score:2)
I live in LA, which is great re: insolation but terrible re: commute distances; my office is 30 miles from my home and most people live 60-70 miles from their work. People commute into downtown Los Angeles all the way from Lancaster and beyond... 30 miles a day is not realistic. I don't think Los Angeles is the only city where long commutes are a reality, either.
I think you misread my intent as well; people ask all the time why we don't have sol
See? Even your numbers say it's possible. (Score:2)
The average commute is closer to 20 miles/day. Los Angeles is an outlier, but look at the bright side! Even by your calculations you could power a long commute entirely by the solar energy falling on a typical house's roof, and that's without postulating anything other than off-the-shelf batteries and solar panels.
At current rates it makes no sense to try to power one's car 100% by solar electricity, but if you want to make the first 20 miles every day (or every trip)
Re:See? Even your numbers say it's possible. (Score:2)
I think my previous experience with 5% efficient amorphous-Si cells gave me a bad perspective on things. I'd love to have a Tzero and run it primarily off solar, absolutely. The right technology is out there, but it's still not-exactly "off the shelf" yet. Close...
Re:See? Even your numbers say it's possible. (Score:2)
But some differences in quantity become differences in quality. Being able to put cells on a vehicle and get a decent amount of range out of it is enough to tip the balance for many applications. A change from 5% efficiency to 50% does that, and more.
Last, I'll bet that any application using nanocrystals is g
Re:No it's not. (Score:3, Insightful)
Watts/m^2 is still important...
The economics of solar power get really interesting when the price gets down to $1/w. For a 10% efficiency, the installed cost of the array needs to come in at $100/m^2 (~$10/ft^2) - at 50% efficiency we're talking $500/m^2 (~$50/ft^2). I would hazard a guess that the support structure and glazing would come in around $10/ft^2 (or more). The last point makes low efficiency cells kind of a non-starter, un
Solar shingles are a current product (Score:2)
bad for the environment (Score:1, Funny)
(a preview of some enviro whacko's response)
BC
Earth is bad for the environment (Score:5, Funny)
Re:bad for the environment (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:bad for the environment (Score:1)
Just wait until the big oil companies find out about this. The project is going to get lobbied to shut down so fast, it'll make their heads spin. What a shame...
Re:bad for the environment (Score:3, Insightful)
On a more reasonable note, remember that the manufacturing processes for many "green" technologies are themselves polluting and producing dangerous and toxic byproducts.
bad for the integrity (Score:2)
Re:bad for the integrity (Score:2)
Waste products produced in the production of solar cells and the fact that, even with moderate amounts of scaling up, they are not cost effective?
And, anecdotally, the propensity for many environmental activists to also be credulous believers in pseudo-science. I realize this is a sweeping generalization, but it's hard for me to shake the image of a high percentage of protestors and activists
Re:bad for the integrity (Score:2)
Re:bad for the integrity (Score:2)
Here are some citations about toxic chemicals in solar cell production. Granted, there are toxic chemicals used in almost any manufacturing process.
http://www.eere.energy.gov/solar/man_pro_implicat i ons.html?print [energy.gov]
http://www.pv.bnl.gov/art_168.pdf [bnl.gov]
Here are a few articles about the efficiency and cost-effectiveness of ethanol production:
http://www.fcpp.or [fcpp.org]
Re:bad for the integrity (Score:2)
I've been researching the comparative pollution generated by solar manufacturing and petro (oil/coal/methane) production, on a per-joule basis. There are a lot of disconnected info resources to lash together, and the research is a part-time hobby, so it's largely inconclusive. But my low-rez info seems to favor the solar industry, especially considering thinfilm solar cells. Biomass is solar, and espec
Re:bad for the integrity (Score:2)
My point, if I actually had one back there, is that any issue worth discussion (that is, it is not just "cut and dried") will bring out extremist wackos from one side or the other who will distort facts and statistics and ignore information that doesn't fit their case. It is just basic human nature. Sometimes they get so far extreme that they wrap around, such as anti-abortionists commiting murder or left wingers so rabid about free speech that they wan
Re:bad for the environment (Score:1)
Andy Out!
Solar cells last longer than that (Score:2)
atmospheric smog (Score:2)
Re:number of responses in /. (Score:2, Insightful)
I think the majority of the people not lurking and posting are people who actually feel passionate about free energy. I am just waiting for a Linux geek touting that he is running a Beowolf
Re:number of responses in /. (Score:2)
(Do the math yourself if you don't believe me. How much horsepower does your car's engine produce? Convert that to Watts (746 watts per hp) and figure out how many solar panels you need to produce that power...)
Price? (Score:4, Insightful)
It is indeed a shame that more interest in this technology doesn't exist. The lack of responses to this article is pretty disappointing, especially since I would think /.ers would be one of the main supporters. Doubling the output of cells is a definite improvement.
I remember reading somewhere (IIRC one of the Real Goods [realgoods.com] Source Books) that had the phrase similar to "Solar Panels will never become widely accepted until they are available from your local Home Depot [homedepot.com]." This definitely rings true. Aside from the solar powered walkway lights (total garbage), they have very little to offer there. Solar Cells need to be cheaper and more powerful if people are going to use them.
It's good to see that progress is being made, though, as this article describes. Perhaps one day it will indeed become practical to use solar panels. Until then, we're stuck with calculators.
Home Depot (Score:2)
It's currently a long-term win to buy panels, but it's too steep an up-front investment for most people. $20K with payback over decades is more than most people are willing to do. Perhaps the power companies could invest in peo
Re:Home Depot (Score:1)
Re:Home Depot (Score:2)
This turns out to no longer be true. Look up thin-film cells, which are both cheap and low materials use.
Re:Home Depot (Score:2)
A batteryless grid-tied system will break even on cost in roughly 6-12 years. Most people just can't stomach the large up-front cost for such a long payoff time. I can't, although I intend to as soon as I have an
Re:Home Depot (Score:1)
True. Some places where power costs $.30/KWh (such as some islands) would yield a quick return. Other places, such as here in Central Florida with Florida Flicker & Flash [fpl.com] charge ~$.08/KWh, and thus the return would take significantly longer. Less if the state gives a rebate or tax credit of some kind (Florida does neither, to my knowledge).
But I agree with a p
Re:Home Depot (Score:2)
Check out sunslates [atlantisenergy.org] for one example-- I seem to remember there being another, but the name escapes me. They go on like slate roofing tiles.
Re:Price? (Score:2)
It could just as easily mean "2 to 3 years before we can produce entire solar cells with this tech".
Available at Canadian Tire (Score:2, Informative)
Go here [canadiantire.ca] and enter SOLAR as the keyword. (enter postal code: K1J 1J8)
I found this:
45W Cottage Solar Panel Kit
Special Offer
Product# 11-1588-0
View larger image
Price $499.99
Availability
In Store Online
Qty.
*
Harness the sun's power to run small appliances (both AC and DC) such as TVs, lights, computers and to recharge your 12V DC batteries in your RV, boat or cottage. The 45-watt Cottage Solar Panel K
Cost? (Score:2)
Not quite there yet (Score:5, Insightful)
So if you really want to know what's going on you need to discover how efferent lead selenium solar cell's are and what it takes to mass produce lead selenium nanocrystals in a cheep long lasting solar cell.
So it's a long way from producing 60+% efficient solar cells but it's still cool.
Re:Not quite there yet (Score:4, Informative)
Nanocrystal films would typically be grown by chemical vapour deposition (chemical constituents react as a gas at low pressure, seed crystals grow in-flight, and grow further after being deposited).
The problem is that it's very hard to produce crystals that small (they tend to keep growing after being deposited, because the source materials are still present - this is how you normally do CVD, actually). You also have difficulty producing a narrow range of sizes, because that requires that the growing environment of each crystal be identical.
Still an interesting discovery, though. The fabrication problems will eventually be solved.
What's especially interesting is looking at what happens when you fabricate oher types of semiconductor microstructure or nanostructure by more conventional techniques. As the size of a feature shrinks, you can no longer pretend it's near-infinite in extent when figuring out what the energy levels are within the crystal. This has already been used to alter the properties of silicon (fabricating LEDs in silicon, which normally emits very poorly due to having an indirect bandgap). Quantum wells, wires, and dots are an extreme case of this (dimensions comparable to a few electron wavelengths). When lithographic feature sizes start approaching this range, lots of new devices will be possible in mass-market chips that are only possible now if you have an e-beam lithography setup handy.
So don't use CVD (Score:2)
How long (Score:2)
Wrong - Energy companies are major investors (Score:2)
I don't recall the number, but IIRC together these companies have invested multiple Billions of $ in advanced energy systems. This is not th
Storage Storage Storage (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Storage Storage Storage (Score:2)
Or it might be a way to bridge the energy gap in ethanol (either for combustion or in fuel cells), where currently you have to burn an amount of fossil fuels to produce the ethanol, some say more than you get out.
At least, I hope one of these works out, or some oth
Re:Storage Storage Storage (Score:3, Informative)
Solar cells are actually very good for this purpose, as electricity is produced directly, as opposed to having to be converted from another energy form (like heat, in the case of a coal or oil fired power plant).
You can produce hydrogen from fossil fuels fairly effi
Re:Storage Storage Storage (Score:3, Interesting)
The battery problem has been solved for vehicles. It was solved when NiMH batteries became available. The issue is the cost of manufacture and actually getting someone to build the things.
Seriously. These guys have viable vehicles:
http://www.solectria.com/products/accomp.html
249 miles on a single charge for their *in production* Solectria Force car, my petrol car does about 240 miles before I have to fill up. They have a prototype called the
Re:Storage Storage Storage (Score:3, Informative)
Storage can be TOO good (Score:4, Interesting)
Store it in a spring. (Score:3, Interesting)
P.S. Battery powered cars have been able to run for 250, 300 miles for a good 7 years or so with a battery life of around 100,
Re:Store it in a spring. (Score:2)
Gas is short for gasoline. I am not sure of the word's origin.
gasoline (Score:1, Offtopic)
Why does the rest of the world call gasoline petroleum?
Gas is short for gasoline, which is what we put in our cars (well, it used to be... now it is a mix of gasoline, ethanol and other crap). It's boiling point is well below that of water and evaporates rather quickly (gas fumes are much more explosive than liquid gas).
Petroleum is "a thick, flammable, yellow-to-black mixture of gaseous, liquid, and solid hydrocarbons that occurs naturally beneath the earth's surface,
Re:Store it in a spring. (Score:2)
Point being that it appears "petrol" is the odd man out.
Ok, here's some numbers for that. (Score:2)
If you allowed for a four hour charge, you would only need a panel of 150 square meters,
Real implications of cheap solar power (Score:3, Interesting)
-- Kevin J. Rice
Re:Real implications of cheap solar power (Score:3, Insightful)
But, the interesting fact is that there are industries, countries and individuals that stand to lose billions of dollars in income if/when such advances in solar energy take place. And billions of dollars they make now buy _a_lot_ of influence. So, don't expect the changes to happen overnight, or any time soon...
The battery technology exists already. (Score:2)
The battery technology exists. It is simply expensive due to lack of manufacturing capacity.
The 80, 90 mile ranges you hear about for electic cars? Lead acid batteries. That's what... 200 year old technology?
NiMH, LiON, and even better LiS batteries are here, now, but are manufactured in quantities too small to make them feasable in a car. It's *purely* down to the manufacturing costs.
Re:Real implications of cheap solar power (Score:2)
Even though burning a perfect mixture of pure methane and pure oxygen do produce only CO2, a car running on pure methane would also produce nitrogen dioxide (NO2) [epa.gov], simply because we would use air inste
Re:Real implications of cheap solar power (Score:3, Interesting)
One very valuable use for cheap electricity is desalinating seawater. Normally arid areas bordering on an ocean or large sea (think places like Baja California, North Africa, even Saudi Arabia) will have access to significant amounts of very fresh water - probably won't be cheap enough for rice farming, but certainly cheap enough for moderately high-value crops.
Reverse osmosis is not as energy intensive as you might think - current technol
For those curious on how a solar cell works.. (Score:2, Informative)