Aaron Cohen

Solar Panel Efficiency Apparently Not Great...YET

Wednesday Aug 01, 2007

Very educational (for me anyway) viewpoint piece in BusinessWeek on energy conversions for converting solar energy into usable electricity; also ways to trim the conversion train for greater efficiency.  At Sun we strive to do a similar thing with our computer processors, constantly innovating to get more compute power by using less power, all through various efficiency innovations.

<SNIP FROM BIZWEEK>

Sometimes the best solutions to the energy crisis are the simplest, and often they're right in front of our eyes. Consider the use of solar power to light a home. Even the most advanced photovoltaic solar panels convert just 20% of the available sunlight to electricity. The resulting direct current (DC) then must undergo conversion to alternating current (AC), losing another 20%. If that AC goes on to light an incandescent bulb, which is only 5% efficient, you end up using a fraction of 1% of the original sunlight as room light. (Even switching to compact florescent bulbs, which are 15% efficient, makes little difference in overall energy efficiency.) But if you were to simply leave sunlight as light—via proper skylights, window orientation, and louvers—nearly 80% of the light ends up as illumination.

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Solar cell breaks efficiency record

Saturday Dec 09, 2006

According to CNET:  Boeing-Spectrolab has developed a solar cell that can convert almost 41 percent of the sunlight that strikes it into electricity, the latest step in trying to drop the cost of solar power, potentially bringing each cell down to 3 dollars a watt.  Current commercial technologies get about half that.efficiency.

The solar race, as previously discussed on CNET, is to bring the cost of solar down to one dollar per watt, and by increasing conversion efficiencies that can help meet that goal.  It's interesting stuff.  Dare I say 2007 is the year of the Sun? 

I am not an engineer or scientist, but this stuff provides endless optimism and fascination for me.

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