Amazing new solar cells
- To: domesteading at sculptors dot com
- Subject: Amazing new solar cells
- From: Israel Rosencrantz <israel at pobox dot com>
- Date: Sun, 7 Jan 2001 09:33:11 -0500
- In-reply-to: <200012220928.eBM9S1216547@bootstrap.sculptors.com>
- References: <200012220928.eBM9S1216547@bootstrap.sculptors.com>
Title: Amazing new solar cells
I thought you would find this interesting. Imagine using a
rubik's
cube to power a house!
http://my.abcnews.go.com/PRINTERFRIENDLY?PAGE=http://abcsource.starwave.com/onair/WorldNewsSaturday/altpower010106.html
Harnessing
the Sun's Power
- There's an excitement going on in the environmental movement
over the development in solar energy- a development that some hope
will eventually run rings around fossil fuels.
Technicians have developed a solar powered
flying wing that will be able to stay aloft for six months at a
time.
The airplane generates all of its own energy,
and stores its own energy, which has been the problem for solar up
until now, and can exist completely independently of outside energy
sources.
Engineers say the technology that powers the
aircraft could solve some of the energy industry's biggest
challenges-generating and then storing solar energy and making it
cost-effective.
A working prototype of a fuel cell coupled
with this new, high-tech solar panels made from silicon or refined
sand. The flat silicon solar panels are arranged in a cube- and that
with the fuel cell ends up being about the size of a Rubik's cube.
Just 10 of those cubes would be enough to generate enough electrical
power for an entire house.
According to Dick Swanson, CEO of Sun Power,
they're talking about the future of power being sunlight, which is
free, and sand, which is probably the most prevalent material on the
planet.
This is how it works: The sun's energy
splits water into hydrogen and oxygen during the day. Then, a fuel
cell then brings the two gases back together to make electricity at
night.
"This energy storage system is actually a
fairly elegant, simple system, we think," says John Delfrate of
NASA.
Simple and Effective- So Far
The flying wing is one example which some day could be used to monitor
the environment and relay telecommunications data.
Power plants will be next, using thousands of
solar cell cubes.
"We can produce this for less than $200 for
200 watts, making it the first approach that we believe can truly
compete with fossil fuels," Swanson says of the cubes. In the
future, far fewer cubes could be used for personal power plants.
"It takes about ten of these to power one
house," Swanson says.
For now, solar power still costs as three
times as much as oil and gas. Analysts say that is the final challenge
the industry needs to overcome before it comes a realistic energy
alternative.
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