View Full Version : Spray-On Solar-Power Cells Are True Breakthrough


cosmictraveler
01-25-05, 07:20 AM
Spray-On Solar-Power Cells Are True Breakthrough

Stefan Lovgren
for National Geographic News

January 14, 2005
Scientists have invented a plastic solar cell that can turn the sun's power into electrical energy, even on a cloudy day.

The plastic material uses nanotechnology and contains the first solar cells able to harness the sun's invisible, infrared rays. The breakthrough has led theorists to predict that plastic solar cells could one day become five times more efficient than current solar cell technology.


Like paint, the composite can be sprayed onto other materials and used as portable electricity. A sweater coated in the material could power a cell phone or other wireless devices. A hydrogen-powered car painted with the film could potentially convert enough energy into electricity to continually recharge the car's battery.

The researchers envision that one day "solar farms" consisting of the plastic material could be rolled across deserts to generate enough clean energy to supply the entire planet's power needs.

"The sun that reaches the Earth's surface delivers 10,000 times more energy than we consume," said Ted Sargent, an electrical and computer engineering professor at the University of Toronto. Sargent is one of the inventors of the new plastic material.

"If we could cover 0.1 percent of the Earth's surface with [very efficient] large-area solar cells," he said, "we could in principle replace all of our energy habits with a source of power which is clean and renewable."

Infrared Power

Plastic solar cells are not new. But existing materials are only able to harness the sun's visible light. While half of the sun's power lies in the visible spectrum, the other half lies in the infrared spectrum.

The new material is the first plastic composite that is able to harness the infrared portion.

"Everything that's warm gives off some heat. Even people and animals give off heat," Sargent said. "So there actually is some power remaining in the infrared [spectrum], even when it appears to us to be dark outside."

The researchers combined specially designed nano particles called quantum dots with a polymer to make the plastic that can detect energy in the infrared.

With further advances, the new plastic "could allow up to 30 percent of the sun's radiant energy to be harnessed, compared to 6 percent in today's best plastic solar cells," said Peter Peumans, a Stanford University electrical engineering professor, who studied the work.

Electrical Sweaters

The new material could make technology truly wireless.

"We have this expectation that we don't have to plug into a phone jack anymore to talk on the phone, but we're resigned to the fact that we have to plug into an electrical outlet to recharge the batteries," Sargent said. "That's only communications wireless, not power wireless."

He said the plastic coating could be woven into a shirt or sweater and used to charge an item like a cell phone.

"A sweater is already absorbing all sorts of light both in the infrared and the visible," said Sargent. "Instead of just turning that into heat, as it currently does, imagine if it were to turn that into electricity."

Other possibilities include energy-saving plastic sheeting that could be unfurled onto a rooftop to supply heating needs, or solar cell window coating that could let in enough infrared light to power home appliances.

Cost-Effectiveness

Ultimately, a large amount of the sun's energy could be harnessed through "solar farms" and used to power all our energy needs, the researchers predict.

"This could potentially displace other sources of electrical production that produce greenhouse gases, such as coal," Sargent said.

In Japan, the world's largest solar-power market, the government expects that 50 percent of residential power supply will come from solar power by 2030, up from a fraction of a percent today.

The biggest hurdle facing solar power is cost-effectiveness.

At a current cost of 25 to 50 cents per kilowatt-hour, solar power is significantly more expensive than conventional electrical power for residences. Average U.S. residential power prices are less than ten cents per kilowatt-hour, according to experts.

But that could change with the new material.

"Flexible, roller-processed solar cells have the potential to turn the sun's power into a clean, green, convenient source of energy," said John Wolfe, a nanotechnology venture capital investor at Lux Capital in New York City.

MacM
01-25-05, 08:48 AM
Cosmictraveler,

Very interesting. I happen to currently be involved in the alternative energy area and hold patents on Wind Energy Conversion Systems. I was historically hired to design an alternative energy farm which combined wind and solar.

It was statistically an excellent marriage. About 80% of the time (the study was over a 5 year period) when there was no solar available (night or bad weather) you had the most wind.

I also hold designs for cost effective solar - heat conversion but not solar cells perse.

Do you have a link to this information?

Thanks.

maxzuk
01-25-05, 10:02 AM
Link (http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/01/0114_050114_solarplastic.html)

apendrapew
01-25-05, 11:58 AM
If this technology becomes as good as theorists predict it will be and they can manufacture it cheaply, it will revolutionize everything. The question is, how good are the prototypes? Can it back up the hype?

MacM
01-25-05, 01:45 PM
Link (http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/01/0114_050114_solarplastic.html)

Thanks.

ScRaMbLe
01-25-05, 05:51 PM
Imagine if every new house built had an entire roof made of this stuff. You could help pay off your morgage selling excess power back to the grid... no blackouts ever again... after the initial setup cost, no more power bills. Thats just the advantages on an individual scale, I wont even start on the environmental benefits.

apendrapew
01-25-05, 07:37 PM
Imagine if every new house built had an entire roof made of this stuff. You could help pay off your morgage selling excess power back to the grid... no blackouts ever again... after the initial setup cost, no more power bills.

Hell yeah man. Self-sufficiency. It would just be a pain in the ass having to clean the roof all the time so the cells get as much solar energy as possible. But nanotechnology has already created self-cleaning windows. Perhaps in due time, they will make the outer coatings of the solar cells to repel dirt and dust in the same way, so they will never need to be cleaned.

Another cool possible application. Painting cars, especially hybrid cars with this stuff. That way, they could be even more efficient, by not needing the engine to charge the batteries as much. Imagine driving a 90 mpg Prius.

ScRaMbLe
01-25-05, 08:30 PM
and spray it on sails for solar electric/ wind/ hydrogen hybrid sail boats... totally self powering! (can you seperate hydrogen from salt water without any side effects?)

weed_eater_guy
01-25-05, 09:33 PM
just cars?! you know how much road/highway surface area in america ALONE add up to? spray this stuff on the road surfaces of the nations, infinite power for all!!! solar and nuke reactors alone could power the world

cosmictraveler
01-26-05, 07:45 AM
and spray it on sails for solar electric/ wind/ hydrogen hybrid sail boats... totally self powering! (can you seperate hydrogen from salt water without any side effects?)


No side effects will happen. All you need is the hydrogen generator to split the water.

http://www.google.com/url?sa=X&oi=froogle&start=1&num=3&q=http://www.bestlabdeals.com/ProductDetails.asp%3FProductCode%3D41301%26click%3 D1796&fr=AJHrzedcieweQobLUQBymXsFum7pj9oLIqngZ-QLN8uTGtfomAaVi_wAAAAAAAAAAA

MacM
01-26-05, 08:52 AM
No side effects will happen. All you need is the hydrogen generator to split the water.

http://www.google.com/url?sa=X&oi=froogle&start=1&num=3&q=http://www.bestlabdeals.com/ProductDetails.asp%3FProductCode%3D41301%26click%3 D1796&fr=AJHrzedcieweQobLUQBymXsFum7pj9oLIqngZ-QLN8uTGtfomAaVi_wAAAAAAAAAAA

I'm going to see if I can find some specific operational data on this unit. Convert that into electricity consumption and that into energy of the hydrogen produced.

Efficiency of this will probably show only a convience for home use and not a savings in that one must buy the electricity to operate it; plus the power plants producing that electricity are still polluting our enviornment.

Combining this (or simular devices) with the spray on electrical grid however would make an excellent package for pollution and energy cost improvement.

river-wind
01-27-05, 12:03 PM
this s great! thanks for the info!