Bringing Sunlight Inside
Wednesday, May 21st, 2008Photovoltaic panels have a new design: concentric circles that focus the sun’s rays on miniaturized modules. Having the panels automatically sense sunlight and turn towards it also makes these high-tech solar cells more efficient.
Solar energy technology is advancing daily. Now, a new, high-tech system is working to efficiently harness the power of the sun and drastically reduce harmful carbon dioxide emissions.
Today, there are more than 76 million residential buildings and nearly 5 million commercial buildings in the United States. Combined, they use two-thirds of all electricity consumed in the United States and produce 35 percent of all carbon dioxide emissions.
Anna Dyson, an architectural scientist from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York, is leading the way to make solar energy a real alternative to pollution-emitting fossil fuels. Her system contains rows of thin lenses that track the sun’s movement. Sunlight floods each lens and is focused onto a postage-stamp sized, high-tech solar cell. Dyson says, “Really, what we want to do is be capturing and transferring that energy for usable means.”
Conventional solar systems are about 14 percent efficient. This system has a combined heat and power efficiency of nearly 80 percent. “What they’re doing is very efficiently capturing and transferring that light into electricity and the solar heat into hot water,” Dyson explains.
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