| Researchers Develop Efficient Solar Power Devices
US: July 14, 2008
WASHINGTON - Using sheets of glass covered with organic dyes, scientists
have devised an efficient and practical solar power device that they believe
can help make this clean, renewable energy source more affordable.
Experts eager for energy sources that do not involve the burning of fossil
fuels often point to the promise of solar energy -- harnessing sunlight to
make electricity. But solar power so far has proven costlier than standard
energy sources.
Writing on Thursday in the journal Science, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology researchers describe the development of a new type of "solar
concentrator" that may provide a better way to extract energy from the sun.
They used glass sheets coated in organic dyes to concentrate light hitting
the panes. The dyes absorbed the light, then emitted it into the glass,
which carried the light to the edges of the pane much as fiber-optic cables
transport light over distances, the researchers said.
At the edges of the glass are located small solar cells that then transform
the light into electricity.
"It consists of just a piece of glass with a layer of paint on top of it,"
MIT electrical engineering professor Marc Baldo, who led the research, said
in a telephone interview.
"The idea is the light comes in and hits the paint. The paint then bounces
the light out to the edges of the glass. All you need is the solar cells on
the edges. So we think we can use this to reduce the cost of solar
electricity," added said.
MIT researcher Jonathan Mapel, who also worked on the study, said the hope
is that the use of this sort of technology can help bring the cost of solar
power closer to the cost of conventional fossil fuel power sources such as
coal.
"One of the challenges with solar (energy) in general is that it's just too
high in cost. And what you'd like to do is reduce the price of solar
electricity," Mapel said.
Solar concentrators collect sunlight over a large area -- in this case the
panes of glass -- and concentrate it into a small solar cell that turns the
light into electricity.
Existing solar concentrators use mirrors or lenses to concentrate the light.
The sheets used in this research are flat and light, thus can be utilized in
solar panels placed on roofs or even used as windows that could generate
power.
The new system, unlike some concentrators, does not have to move to track
the progression of the sun across the sky in order to provide a continuous
power source, Baldo said.
The researchers think their system could be available within three years and
even could be added onto existing solar-panel systems to increase their
efficiency.
"This accomplishment demonstrates the critical importance of innovative
basic research in bringing about revolutionary advances in solar energy
utilization in a cost-effective manner," Aravinda Kini of the US Department
of Energy's Office of Science, a sponsor of the work, said in a statement.
Some of the MIT researchers are forming a company, Covalent Solar, based in
Boston to develop and market the technology. (Editing by Anthony Boadle)
Story by Will Dunham
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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