Tuesday, August 3, 2010

New Discovery Could Cut Solar Power Production Costs in Half

Stanford engineers have figured out how to simultaneously use the light and heat of the sun to generate electricity in a way, that could make solar power production more than twice as efficient as existing methods and potentially cheap enough to compete with oil.

Stanford University news said that unlike photovoltaic technology currently used in solar panels - which becomes less efficient as the temperature rises - the new process excels at higher temperatures, Qatar News Agency (QNA) reported Tuesday.

Called "photon enhanced thermionic emission," or PETE, the process promises to surpass the efficiency of existing photovoltaic and thermal conversion technologies.

Assistant Professor of Materials Science and Engineering Nick Melosh, who led the research group said: This is really a conceptual breakthrough, a new energy conversion process, not just a new material or a slightly different tweak.

"It is actually something fundamentally different about how you can harvest energy."

The materials needed to build a device to make the process work are cheap and easily available, meaning the power that comes from it will be affordable, he said.

Melosh is senior author of a paper describing the tests the researchers conducted. It was published online Aug 1 in Nature Materials.

"Just demonstrating that the process worked was a big deal. And we showed this physical mechanism does exist; it works as advertised."

Most photovoltaic cells, he said such as those used in rooftop solar panels, use the semiconducting material silicon to convert the energy from photons of light to electricity.

But the cells can only use a portion of the light spectrum, with the rest just generating heat.

This heat from unused sunlight and inefficiencies in the cells themselves account for a loss of more than 50 percent of the initial solar energy reaching the cell.

If this wasted heat energy could somehow be harvested, solar cells could be much more efficient. The problem has been that high temperatures are necessary to power heat-based conversion systems, yet solar cell efficiency rapidly decreases at higher temperatures.

Until now, no one had come up with a way to wed thermal and solar cell conversion technologies, Melosh said.

Melosh's group figured out that by coating a piece of semiconducting material with a thin layer of the metal cesium, it made the material able to use both light and heat to generate electricity.

"What we've demonstrated is a new physical process that is not based on standard photovoltaic mechanisms, but can give you a photovoltaic-like response at very high temperatures," Melosh said.

"In fact, it works better at higher temperatures. The higher the better."

While most silicon solar cells have been rendered inert by the time the temperature reaches 100 degrees Celsius, the PETE device doesn't hit peak efficiency until it is well over 200 C.

Because PETE performs best at temperatures well in excess of what a rooftop solar panel would reach, the devices will work best in solar concentrators such as parabolic dishes, which can get as hot as 800 C.

Dishes are used in large solar farms similar to those proposed for the Mojave Desert in Southern California and usually include a thermal conversion mechanism as part of their design, which offers another opportunity for PETE to help generate electricity as well as minimize costs by meshing with existing technology.

SOURCE

No comments: