More new, great innovation coming to renewables.
See-Through Solar Panels Will Put Untapped Energy to Work
Researchers foresee 'inexpensive, widespread solar adoption on small and large surfaces that were previously inaccessible.'
by Kyree Leary
See-through solar panels could supply 40 percent of U.S. electricity demand, according to scientists.Richard Lunt / Richard Lunt/Michigan State University
In brief: Researchers
from Michigan State University believe transparent solar panels have
the potential to generate just as much solar power as rooftop solar
panels. When used effectively, they could at full implementation provide
40 percent of electricity in the U.S.
SEE-THROUGH SOLAR PANELS
Solar panels and solar power-generating windows
are a couple of things people have come up with to take advantage of
the Sun, but now a team of engineering researchers from Michigan State
University (MSU) have proposed the use of transparent solar panels.
Combined with rooftop panels, our reliance on fossil fuels could be
greatly reduced and we’d be close to meeting the United States’ high
electricity demand.
Led by Richard Lunt,
the Johansen Crosby Endowed Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering
and Materials Science at MSU, the team created a transparent
luminescent solar concentrator that could generate solar energy on any
clear surface without affecting the view. In theory, it could be applied
to cell phones, windows, buildings, and cars.
“Highly
transparent solar cells represent the wave of the future for new solar
applications,” said Lunt. “We analyzed their potential and show that by
harvesting only invisible light, these devices can provide a similar
electricity-generation potential as rooftop solar while providing
additional functionality to enhance the efficiency of buildings,
automobiles and mobile electronics.”
GROWING POTENTIAL
Currently, according to Lunt and his team,
only 1.5 percent of electricity in the U.S. is generated by solar
power. Transparent solar panels, however, could account for 40 percent
of electricity, provided its used on the 5-7 billion square meters of
glass surface in the country — something that’s unlikely to happen
anytime soon.
Before they can even be
considered, they need to be more efficient. Compared to solar panel’s 15
percent efficiency, transparent panels are only 5 percent efficient.
Despite this, Lunt states that transparent panels are only about a third
of the way into their full potential after five years’ research. Going
forward, work will be done to improve the panel’s capabilities, though
they’re not expected to outperform or replace the traditional solar
panels we’ve become accustomed to.
“Ultimately,
this technology offers a promising route to inexpensive, widespread
solar adoption on small and large surfaces that were previously
inaccessible,” added Lunt.
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