Solar Energy

A Synopsis of Everything Under the Sun

The sun provides the primary source of energy on Earth - solar energy. This Knol aspires to be a helpful primer on many of the basic topics within "solar energy," rather than a granular examination of any one aspect. The lion's share of the Knol is devoted to the two most widely deployed solar-energy technologies -- photovoltaics and concentrated solar-power -- that convert solar energy into electricity. I hope you find it helpful and appreciate any feedback that might contribute to this end.


Map of The World's Solar Energy Potential, (July, 2008)[1]
Key: Solar Energy Potential Rises As Color Brightens



“. . . all the coal deposits of Pennsylvania would not liberate a thousandth part as much heat as does the surface of the sun in that unit of time,”
- Samuel P. Langley, 1880

Solar Energy

The Mechanics of Energy

Energy is the capacity of matter to perform work.[2]  Energy exists in multiple forms - mechanical, thermal, chemical, electrical, radiant, and atomic. One form of energy can be converted into any other form of energy if exposed to the appropriate processes. For example, sunlight, a form of radiant energy, is converted into carbohydrates, a form of chemical energy, by plants through a process called photosynthesis.[3] Animals transform chemical energy stored in plants into either kinetic energy (physical movement) or the chemical bonds - a second form of chemical energy - that hold together a living person's body. Otherwise, plants die and over eons of time morph into fossil fuels like oil and natural gas.[4] 

Synopsis of Solar Energy

The Sun is about 900,000 miles across and is at least 10 million degrees at its center. The surface of the sun is roughly 6,000°C and its hot gases emit light that has a spectrum ranging from the ultraviolet, through the visible, into the infrared. Photovoltaic or solar cells convert solar power directly into electrical power. Light consists of discrete particle-like packets of energy called photons. Sunlight contains photons with energies that reflect the sun’s surface temperature; in energy units of electron volts. The energy density packed into the photons vary, but the visible region of the light spectrum tends to contain among the highest concentrations of energy that hits the planet.[5] 

More energy from sunlight strikes the Earth in one hour than all the energy consumed on the planet in a year. At high noon on a cloudless day, the surface of the Earth receives 1,000 watts of solar power per square meter. Sunlight provides by far the largest of all carbon-neutral energy sources. Heat travels in all directions from the Sun and is the ultimate source of all energy on Earth. This energy is responsible for all sorts of weather events, not only scorching heat waves. For instance, wind occurs when sunlight heats the ground, which heats the air above it, which rises, so that cool air whisks in to take its place.

NASA Map of World Solar Energy Potential[6]


In the past decade, solar energy has attracted significant attention from investors, policymakers and the public generally because it is widely available, geopolitically secure and environmentally sustainable. Indeed, solar energy does not create greenhouse gases as a byproduct of generating electricity. Not surprisingly, it is widely considered among the most compelling solutions available for the world's need for clean, abundant sources of energy. Skeptics need only consider the $7.5 billion solar-energy industry - still growing at a rate of more than 30% every year — to appreciate the growing popularity of solar energy in mainstream electricity markets. Still, in 2001, solar electricity provided less than 0.1% of the world's electricity. 





What "Efficiency" Means in the Solar-Energy Sector?

The efficiency of a solar cell is a measure of its ability to convert the energy that falls on it in the form of EM radiation into electrical energy, expressed as a percent. The power rating of a solar cell is expressed in watts, as either as peak watt (Wp), which is a measure of maximum possible performance under ideal conditions, or under more real-life conditions including normal operating cell temperature and AMPM (whole day rather than peak sunshine) standard ratings.  The following chart shows solar-efficiencies for several of the leading-edge solar cell technologies.

Solar energy is the conversion of the sun’s energy into electricity. Light emitted by the sun is a form of electromagnetic (EM) radiation, and the visible spectrum comprises the majority of solar radiation. EM radiation that falls below the visible spectrum (the infrared region) contains less energy while radiation above the visible spectrum (the ultraviolet region) contains more energy.  Solar cells respond differently to various forms of EM radiation, and this is also generally dependent on the material used to construct the cells. Crystalline silicon, for example, is able to use the entire visible spectrum, plus a portion of the infrared spectrum. Energy in EM radiation that is outside of the useable region of a solar cell is generally lost as heat. Insolation is the amount of energy present in sunlight falling on a specific geographical region, which is determined by a range of factors that include time of day, time of year, climate, air pollution and several other factors. As a result, the economics of solar energy depend heavily on appropriate geographic siting.

A Very Short History of Solar Energy

“I’d put my money on the sun & solar energy. What a source of power! I hope we don’t have to wait until oil and coal run out before we tackle that. I wish I had more years left.”
                                -Thomas Edison, 1931

 
Design for John Ericsson's Sun Motor, New York,1872

In 1767, Swiss scientist Horace de Saussure built the world's first solar collector, which was used years later by Sir John Herschel to cook food during his South African expedition in the 1830s. Meanwhile, on September 27, 1816, Robert Stirling applies for a patent for his economiser at the Chancery in Edinburgh, Scotland. This engine is later used in the dish/Stirling system, a solar thermal electric technology that concentrates the sun's thermal energy to produce electric power. In 1839, Alexandre-Edmond Becquerel, a French physicist, discovered the so-called photovoltaic effect,[7]  when he built a device that could measure the intensity of light by observing the strength of an electric current between two metal plates.  When sunlight is absorbed by a solar cell, the solar energy knocks electrons loose from their atoms, allowing the electrons to flow through the material to produce electricity. This process of converting light (photons) to electricity (voltage) is called the photovoltaic (PV) effect.

Becquerel's conversion process transformed only 1% of the sunlight that fell on the submerged electrode into electricity. In other words, the conversion process was only 1% efficient.  Following the initial discovery of the PV effect, scientists experimented with different materials in an attempt to find a practical use for PV systems. In the late nineteenth century, scientists discovered that the metal selenium was particularly sensitive to sunlight, and during the 1880 s Charles Fritts constructed the first selenium solar cell. His device, however, was inefficient, converting less than one percent of the received light into usable electricity. 

John Ericsson, a Swedish inventor who lived and worked for most of his adult life in the United States, designed and built the world’s first solar-energy engine/dish in Pasadena, Calif.  Ericsson presented the concept design for the solar machine (featured above) in 1876 at the centennial celebration in Philadelphia. 
 

World's First Solar Energy Dish, Pasadena, Calif. 1901

The Fritts selenium solar cell was mostly forgotten until the 1950s, when the drive to produce an efficient solar cell was renewed. It was known that the key to the photovoltaic cell lay in creating a semiconductor that would release electrons when exposed to radiation within the visible spectrum. During this time, researchers at the Bell Telephone Laboratories were developing similar semiconductors to be used in communication systems. By accident, Bell scientists Calvin Fuller and Daryl Chapin found the perfect semiconductor: a hybridized crystal called a " doped" cell, which was made of phosphorous and boron. The first solar cells using these new crystals debuted in 1954 and yielded a conversion efficiency of nearly six percent. Later improvements in the design increased the efficiency to almost 15 percent. 

In 1957 Bell Telephone used a silicon solar cell to power a telephone repeater station in Georgia. The process was considered a success although it was still too inefficient to penetrate the general mmarketplace . The first real application of silicon solar cells came in 1958 when a solar array was used to provide electricity for the radio transmitter of Vanguard 1 , the second American satellite to orbit Earth. Solar cells have been used on almost every satellite launched since.

Total global solar cell production increased from less than 10 MWp/yr in 1980 to about 1,200 MWp/yr in 2004; the current total global PV installed capacity is more than 3 Gigawatts per year.

By the 1960s, photovoltaic cells were used to power U.S. space satellites. By the 1980s, the simplest photovoltaic systems were being used commercially to power small calculators and wrist watches.  Today, advanced solar-energy systems provide electricity to pump water, power communications equipment and increasingly generate electricity on a commercial scale.  Two solar-energy technologies currently dominate the market for solar-based electricity production. Concentrating solar power systems direct sunlight through a magnifying lens, which increases the heat energy and drives a generator that produces electricity. Photovoltaics systems (PV) convert solar energy into electricity with semiconductors. A third technology, solar heating, absorbs the sun's energy with solar collectors and provides low-grade heat used directly for solar water heating, solar space heating in buildings, and solar pool heaters.

Annual Solar Energy Investments by Region/Technology


From the mid 1950s to the early 1970s, PV research and development (R&D) was directed primarily toward space applications and satellite power. Large-scale development of solar collectors began in the United States in the mid-1970s  under the Energy Research and Development Administration and continued under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy after 1976. In 1973, a greatly increased level of R&D on solar cells was initiated following  the oil embargo in that year, which caused widespread concern regarding energy supply. In 1976, the U.S. Department of Energy, along with its Photovoltaics Program, was created. DOE, as well as many other international organizations, began funding PV R&D at appreciable levels, and a terrestrial solar cell industry quickly evolved. [8]

Solar Energy's Market Share Rises As Costs Fall

By the late twentieth century, solar energy had become practical and affordable enough to warrant its broad-scale marketing as one of the primary energy sources of the future. During the 1990s, the price of solar energy plunged 50 percent as technology improved. Meanwhile, PV applications went from a niche source of electricity to bringing solar technology into the margins of the mainstream.  More than 10,000 homes in the United States were powered exclusively by solar energy in the late 1990s while an additional 200,000 homes supplemented electricity consumption with some form of photovoltaic system, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association. Although the  solar power industry was valued globally at $5 billion in 2003, solar power still represented only about one percent of all electric power in the United States that year, primarily due to its persistently high costs and the continuing availability of cheap energy via traditional sources.  As you will discover in the following sections, these barriers have fallen dramatically in recent years and unleashed a small revolution in the role the sun plays in humanity's daily life.  


Principal Solar-Energy Technologies

In 2004, solar energy accounted for only 0.039 percent of the world's total primary energy supply of 11,059 million metric tons of oil equivalent, according to the International Energy Agency. In other words, solar energy provided about 4 terawatt-hours of electricity generation, out of an estimated overall total production of some 17,450 terawatt-hours (1 terawatt = 1 trillion watts). The strength of the solar energy available at any point on the earth depends on the day of the year, the time of day, and the latitude of at which it hits the Earth.



Sunlight is composed of photons, or particles of solar energy. These photons contain various amounts of energy corresponding to the different wavelengths of the solar spectrum.  When photons strike a photovoltaic cell, they may be reflected, pass right through, or be absorbed. Only the absorbed photons provide energy to generate electricity.  When enough sunlight is absorbed by the material, electrons are dislodged from the material's atoms.  Special treatment of the material surface during manufacturing makes the front surface of the cell more receptive to free electrons, so the electrons naturally migrate to the surface.
 
When the electrons leave their position, holes are formed.  When many electrons, each carrying a negative charge, travel toward the front surface of the cell, the resulting imbalance of charge between the cell's front and back surfaces creates a voltage potential like the negative and positive terminals of a battery.  When the two surfaces are connected through an external load, electricity flows. To increase power output, cells are electrically connected into a packaged weather-tight module.  Modules can be further connected to form an array.  The term array refers to the entire generating plant, which can consists of as few as one solar module or several thousand modules.  The number of modules connected together in an array depends on the amount of power output needed.

Several technologies have been developed to harness that energy, including concentrated solar-power systems; passive solar heating and daylighting, photovoltaic systems, solar hot water, and solar process heat and space heating and cooling. To understand the mechanics of these technologies, the best place to begin is the beginning of solar-energy technologies - photovoltaics.


Photovoltaics

Solar Photovoltaics - A Tutorial

Photovoltaic solar cells convert solar radiation, or sunlight, directly into electrical power. Solar cells are the basic building blocks of photovoltaic systems. PV-based solar energy has become one of the most successful energy technologies the world has ever seen, achieving cost-reductions similar to those achieved by Ford during the era of the Model-T.  

There are two types of photovoltaic solar-cells: crystalline silicon cells and thin-film solar cells. Crystalline silicon solar cells typically use silicon or polysilicon substrates.  Individual cells vary in size from about 1/2 inch to about 4 inches across and include additional layers placed on top of the silicon to enhance light capture.  In "thin-film" solar cells, the substrate is made of glass, metal or polymer substrates and has small deposits of gallium or semiconductor materials placed on top. The substrate may be just a few micrometers thick.  Thin film solar cells are typically less efficient than crystalline silicon solar cells.

PV Electricity Historical Costs Have Fallen


When sunlight strikes a solar panel, electricity is produced because sunlight releases electrons. Solar cells are frequently combined to produce a large amount of electrical energy in solar-modules and ultimately solar arrays. Solar cells with conversion efficiencies in the neighborhood of 20% were readily available at the beginning of the 21st century, with efficiencies twice as high or more achieved with experimental cells.

Anaylsts Agree that Solar Energy Will Be A High Growth Market for Years to Come

Energy conversion efficiency is an expression of the amount of energy produced in proportion to the amount of energy available to a device. The sun produces a lot of energy in a wide light spectrum, but we have so far learned to capture only small portions of that spectrum and convert them to electricity using photovoltaics. So, today's commercial PV systems are about 20% efficient. And many PV systems degrade a little bit (lose efficiency) each year upon prolonged exposure to sunlight. For comparison, a typical fossil fuel generator has an efficiency of about 28%.






Solar cells are typically combined into modules that hold about 40 cells; about 10 of these modules are mounted in PV arrays that can measure up to several meters on a side. These flat-plate PV arrays can be mounted at a fixed angle facing south, or they can be mounted on a tracking device that follows the sun, allowing them to capture the most sunlight over the course of a day. About 10 to 20 PV arrays can provide enough power for a household; for large electric utility or industrial applications, hundreds of arrays can be interconnected to form a single, large PV system.

The performance of a photovoltaic array is dependent upon sunlight.  Climate conditions and environmental factors have a huge impact on the amount of solar energy received by a photovoltaic array.  The current record for solar-cell conversion efficiency, established in August 2008 by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, is 40.8 percent.

Photovoltaic cells, like batteries, produce direct electric current (DC) which is generally used to power fairly small loads like those usually required by electronic equipment. When DC from photovoltaic cells is used for commercial applications or sold to electric utilities using the electric grid, it must be converted to alternating current (AC) using inverters, solid state devices that convert DC power to AC.

Concentrating Solar Power (or Solar Thermal)


Solar cells are often placed under a lens that focuses or concentrates the sunlight before it hits the cells. This approach has both advantages and disadvantages compared with flat-plate PV arrays. The main idea is to use very little of the expensive semiconducting PV material while collecting as much sunlight as possible. But because the lenses must be pointed at the sun, the use of concentrating collectors is limited to the sunniest parts of the country. Some concentrating collectors are designed to be mounted on simple tracking devices, but most require sophisticated tracking devices, which further limit their use to electric utilities, industries, and large buildings.



Concentrating solar power (CSP) systems channel sunlight through an optical lens that amplifies the strength and heat of the sun.  There are currently three principal types of concentrating solar energy systems: trough systems, dish/engine systems and power towers. CSP plants deploy these systems in large numbers of mirror configurations that convert the sun's energy into high-temperature heat. The heat energy turns water into steam, which then powers a turbine and generates electricity.



On a large scale, and as a means of generating power, CSP has several advantages over photovoltaic cells. Power from concentrating solar heat is less variable than from photovoltaic solar (or from wind), an important consideration for a full-scale utility. Solar thermal facilities can be designed to store energy for several hours after sundown, helping a utility meet evening spikes in demand. And since solar thermal plants use the same steam turbines to generate power that other generating stations use, the plants can be hybridized to burn natural gas or other fuels during nighttime hours, to keep output constant and maximize use of the turbines.

CSP Receives Majority of Federal Research Funding for Solar Energy[9]

Concentrated solar power is currently the fastest-growing, utility-scale renewable energy alternative after wind power, according to a December 2007 report by Emerging Energy Research, a Cambridge, Mass.-based consulting firm. The study describes the technique as "well-positioned to compete against other electricity generation technologies" and estimates that $20 billion will be spent on solar thermal power projects around the world from 2008 to 2013.

Concentrating collectors reflect solar energy falling on a large area and focus it onto a small receiving area, which amplifies the intensity of the solar energy. The temperatures that can be achieved at the receiver can reach over 1,000 degrees Celsius.  The concentrators must move to track the sun if they are to perform effectively; the devices used to achieve this are called heliostats.  There are three main types of concentrating solar power systems: parabolic-trough, dish/engine, and power tower.

Parabolic-Trough Systems


Parabolic-trough systems concentrate the sun's energy through long rectangular, curved (U-sh
aped) mirrors. The mirrors are tilted toward the sun, focusing sunlight on a pipe that runs down the center of the trough. This heats the oil flowing through the pipe, which boils water in a conventional steam generator to produce electricity.

In the United States, a group of parabolic-trough power plants located in
California's Mojave Desert and known as the Solar Energy Generating Systems (SEGS) includes two, SEGS VIII and IX at Harper Lake, that as of 2007 were the biggest in the world, each with a capacity of 80 MW  and together totaling roughly 400,000 mirrors.

In general a parabolic trough power plant uses about 5 to 10 acres land per megawatt of electric capacity depending on whether or not the solar field has been designed to take advantage of thermal energy storage. Solar plants need to be built on flat areas in the best solar regions.

While several large parabolic trough facilities have become been built in recent year, a slew of other are now in development. Spanish industrial group
Abengoa is developing a 280Mw parabolic trough station near Phoenix and several others in Spain. Martifer Renewables, 80% owned by Portugal's Martifer Group, is building a 107Mw parabolic trough facility near Fresno, Calif., which it says will begin operating in 2011. In March, Florida-based FPL Group applied to build a $1 billion, 250Mw concentrated solar power facility north of Los Angeles that would be operational in 2011.


Dish-Shaped Receivers


The third system design for concentrating solar energy is the so-called "dish system." Dish generators, which look like large satellite TV dishes, concentrate the sun's rays on a focal point in front of the dish in the same way that a satellite dish reflects a TV signal to a receiver. Mounted at the focal point is either a Stirling Engine, which converts heat to mechanical energy, which then turns a turbine, or, less often, a photovoltaic panel. 

A solar dish-engine system is an electric generator that "burns" sunlight instead of gas or coal to produce electricity. The dish, a concentrator, is the primary solar component of the system, collecting the energy coming directly from the sun and concentrating it on a small receiver.  The receiver absorbs the heat and transfers it to fluid within the engine. The heat causes the fluid to expand against a piston or turbine to produce mechanical power. The mechanical power is then used to run a generator or alternator to produce electricity.


Solar Energy Dish, New Mexico


In a dish/engine system, a dish-shaped mirror tracks the sun and reflects sunlight onto a receiver. The heat is then used to power a high-efficiency heat engine, with the heated working fluid expanding to drive a piston or turbine that can run a generator or alternator to produce electricity. At Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico, an experimental installation using a Stirling engine with hydrogen as the working fluid achieved a conversion efficiency (energy provided to electric grid as a proportion of solar energy hitting the reflectors) of more than 30 percent in early 2008.

Power Tower Systems

The final major CSP technology is the so-called "power tower." A power tower system uses a large field of mirrors to concentrate sunlight onto the top of a tower, w here a receiver sits. This heats molten salt flowing through the receiver. The salt's heat is then used to generate elec tricity through a conventional steam generator.  This design is able to achieve much higher temperatures than the parabolic trough, though the latter converts thermal energy to electricity more efficiently, and storage is less expensive. The first commercial power tower, a 10Mw facility near Seville, Spain, was built by Abengoa and began operating in 2007.

In the U.S., BrightSource Energy has plans to build a major Power Tower facility in the Mojave Desert. The first unit will have 100Mw of capacity and is expected to start operating in 2011. Pasadena (Calif.)-based eSolar has affreed to sell power from a 248Mw tower system it will build in southern California.



PowerTower, Mojave Desert, USA

Molten salt retains heat efficiently, so it can be stored for days before being converted into electricity. That means electricity can be produced on cloudy days or even several hours after sunset. Concentrators can be used to generate extremely high temperatures, making solar furnaces possible. The biggest of these, located at Odeillo in the Pyrenees Mountains of France, uses 63 reflectors with a total area of about 30,515 sq ft to produce temperatures as high as 5400° F.

Passive Solar

The use of sunlight to provide illumination within a building, especially in order to supplement or replace electric lighting, is sometimes called daylighting or passive solar. Solar lighting may involve a variety of techniques and technologies, ranging from efficient window placement, to the use of special window coatings that minimize reflection or can alter the window's transmittance depending on the weather, to the use of solar collectors and fiber optics to transmit sunlight into a building. The early 21st century as seen active research on hybrid solar lighting, combining daylight piped in by optical fiber with electric lighting. Through this approach, consistent illumination can be provided at a lower cost than with conventional electric light.

Solar Water Heating

Energy used for water heating is a significant fraction of the total energy demand in the commercial and residential sectors. In 2004, water heating in the residential sector consumed about 23% of all residential natural gas use, 8% of all residential electricity use, and about 12% of total residential energy expenditures.3 Nationwide, about 8% of all end-use natural gas is used to heat water in commercial and residential buildings

In the 1890s, solar water heaters were being used all over the United States. They proved to be a big improvement over wood and coal-burning stoves. Artificial gas made from coal was available too to heat water, but it cost 10 times the price we pay for natural gas today. Many homes used solar water heaters.  In 1897, 30 percent of the homes in Pasadena, just east of Los Angeles, were equipped with solar water heaters. As mechanical improvements were made, solar systems were used in Arizona, Florida and many other sunny parts of the United States. By 1920, ten of thousands of solar water heaters had been sold. By then, however, large deposits of oil and natural gas were discovered in the western United States. Gradually, low-cost fossil fuels made their way into the mainstream and replaced most solar water systems. 

The oil shocks and energy crises of the 1970s restored the appeal and policy support for solar-water heating in the United States, which expanded significantly in the late 1970s and early 1980s as a result of increasing energy prices and generous tax credits. When federal tax credits ended in 1985 and energy prices fell, the U.S. market for solar-water heating virtually disappeared.[10]  Nearly three decades later, the combined influence of public concern about climate change and the anticipation of rising energy prices in the near-term future has sparked a second revival of solar-water heating. In particular, the state of Hawaii - which has the highest electricity prices of any state in the nation - has promoted solar-water heating with a range of government incentives for consumers and producers.

The Future of Solar-Energy

Solar power is in rapid growth mode; new manufacturers and installers of photovoltaic solar cell systems are cropping up everywhere. With present technologies, even assuming continued rapid growth, solar cells are predicted to only supply about 5% of the huge amount of carbon-free energy we will need by 2050. 

Most present production of solar power is based on crystalline silicon cells, the first generation technology. The second generation, now starting to be commercialized, is based on thin-film cells and cells made from inexpensive oxide semiconductor materials coated with light sensitive dyes and from photoactive organic polymeric materials. These approaches may yield much lower costs, but at present have significantly lower conversion efficiencies.


The game-changing breakthrough needed from third-generation cells is both lower cost and very high
conversion efficiency, which will require entire new paradigms for photon capture and conversion. High efficiency solar cells can be produced currently by combining semiconductor materials in a tandem cell structure so as to capture far more of the energy in sunlight. The trouble is that the cost per unit area of these cells is 200 times more expensive than first generation cells.
Advanced Solar-Energy Research Projects

Another approach to third generation solar cells is based on so-called quantum dot solar cells, made from semiconducting nanocrystals arranged in unique configurations that alter and enhance the absorptive and electron-producing properties of semiconductors like silicon in dramatic ways. Third generation solar cells are still in the early stages of scientific exploration and we don’t know how to make cells that show the promised high efficiency and low cost sufficient to beat the cost of electricity from coal. The opportunity is huge; third-generation cells can in principle greatly exceed the theoretical limit of conversion efficiency for first and second-generation designs, dramatically lowering the cost of solar electricity.

The Bleeding Edge of Solar Energy


U.S. R&D Funding for Advanced Solar-Energy Technologies


One of the more spectacular possibilities for next-generation solar energy technology includes systems that replicate the basic process of photosynthesis. A team of researchers of the University of Tel Aviv claim to have designed new solar cells that rely on genetically-engineered proteins to convert sunlight into electricity in a process analogous to photosynthesis. The Israeli researchers claim their new solar cells cost less than conventional solar cells and have conversion rates of 25% or roughly double the rate of older silicon cells. In addition, Daniel Nocera, a chemistry professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Nathan Lewis, a professor of chemistry at California Institute of Technology, have pioneered forms of artificial photosynthesis that convert sunlight into electricity.

Resources, Reports and Additional Reading Materials Related to Solar-Energ

   San Diego State University's Guide to Solar Energy
   National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Solar Energy Basics
   U.S. Office of Scientific & Technical Information - Guide to Solar Energy Educational Materials

References

  1. NASA Earth Observation
  2. Energy Quest, Chapter 1
  3. Radiant Energy - Energy transferred by the exchange of electromagnetic waves from a hot or warm object to one that is cold or cooler. Direct contact with the object is not necessary for the heat transfer to occur.
    Radiant Energy
  4. What You Need to Know About Energy, National Academy of Sciences
  5. "Basic Energy Needs for Solar Energy Research," U.S. Department of Energy, Basic Sciences Advisory Committee (2005).
  6. Map of the Sunniest Spots in the World, Clean Tech Law & Business
  7. The term photovoltaics derives from the Greek word "phos" meaning light and the word "volt" (named by Alessandro Volta),
    PV Resources
  8. Solar Energy Report (PDF)
  9. U.S. Department of Energy, Solar Energy Technologies Program, "Accelerating the Future of Solar," p. 5, 2008.
  10. The Technical Potential of Solar Water Heating to Reduce Fossil Fuel Use and Greenhouse Gas Emissions in the United States, U.S. Department of Energy,National Renewable Energy Laboratory (March 2007).
  11. Solar Energy Timeline
  12. New Science for A Secure & Sustainable Energy Future, U.S. Department of Energy,Basic Energy Sciences Advisory Committee (December 2008)
  13. The Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy Agency, Solar Glossary

Comments

Residential Solar Power Systems

I believe the only way for solar power to work is for all residential and commercial properties to be outfitted with their own grid tied solar power system, and for the "electric companies" to supplement with large scale solar power systems. This would effectively turn the entire country into one very large solar powered system, producing large ammounts of electricity.
http://howtobuildyourownsolarpanel.x10hosting.com

Last edited Jul 30, 2009 11:44 PM
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Acheiving Economies of Scale

Great, thorough article! As discussed, we need a scale of production much greater than current levels of to be competitive with conventional energy production methods. One innovative way to increase demand for photovoltaics such that they can compete with conventional electricity production methods is to harness the green purchasing power of academic institutions (universities and colleges). This has been shown to be potentially quite influential in catalyzing a positive spiral-effect in renewables globally. Please see: Joshua M. Pearce, “Catalyzing Mass Production of Solar Photovoltaic Cells Using University Driven Green Purchasing”, International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education, 7(4), pp. 425 – 436, 2006. at http://www.emeraldinsight.com/10.1108/14676370610702226

Last edited Jun 12, 2009 12:59 PM
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Untitled

I was disappointed that the article did not go into the controversy of whether solar should be privately owned or controlled by the oil companies and utilities.
I have been a big fan of solar for years,but because of the potential freedom it offers..
It makes me sick when "environmentalist" suggest that I pay taxes to give solar panels to the electric company and then pay a higher electric bill . Literally charging me for the sun in the sky and the wind in the air!

Last edited Apr 8, 2009 9:29 AM
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Solar Energy or Biodiesel from Algae – which is more efficient

While putting Solar system, one has to compare this with other sustainable & renewable energy systems.

My question in this regard is, given an area of land which system is more efficient (cost wise and reliability wise) - Solar Energy or Biodiesel from Algae? Algae can also be grown in desert.

In my opinion, Biodiesel from Algae would be more efficient and convenient. The Energy (BTU or Joule) obtained per unit area of land used would be more in case of Biodiesel from Algae than Solar system.

Last edited May 9, 2009 4:01 PM
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Incredible

I didn't think that U.S. invest more capital than E.U.
Well, US have the deserts, that's an advantage!

Last edited Jan 11, 2009 10:22 AM
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Solar thermal

In your introduction you assert that CST and PV are the most widely deployed solar technologies. What metric have you used to gauge this?

The very short section on solar water heating and passive solar leads me to believe you have not looked at the adoption of these technologies in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. I believe solar water heating is mandated by law in Isreal. While support in the US has languished, these technologies are widely deployed elsewhere. Both NREL and the national labs have also devoted a lot of research funds into these technologies over the last 20- 30 years.

Mention should be made that both low temperature solar thermal and passive solar thermal technologies are presently more efficient than CST, CSP, or PV. I also think you overlook the most widespread use of passive solar: heating. In fact, whether by design or coincidence, passive solar technology reduces winter time energy consumption for heating everywhere on earth.

Thanks.

Last edited Nov 9, 2008 9:51 AM
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Block graph of "fossile energy supply" (sic)

There is enough mine-able uranium in the Earth's crust for at least several tens of thousands of years of current energy output.

And Thorium is twice as abundant again.

Is there any source for the "60 years" figure? Or did someone just make it up?

Or perhaps it's a typo, like the fossil typo. Doesn't inspire much confidence in the rest of the article.


Last edited Nov 9, 2008 9:57 AM
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