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  #11  
Old 08-20-2009, 05:50 AM
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Post Using solar heat to power air conditioning (Los Angeles Times)

Southern California Gas Co. is testing systems that use less gas and electricity and is inviting businesses to view the prototypes on the roof of its Downey research facility. Everyone knows solar power can heat homes and generate electricity.

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Everyone knows solar power can heat homes and generate electricity.

But on a rooftop in Downey, Southern California Gas Co. engineers are using solar mirrors to cool down their offices.

Engineers are testing two technologies that use mirrors to concentrate sunlight onto pipes with water running through them. The heated water powers a thermal process in a chiller that cools the cold water used in air conditioning units.

"When we tell people we heat water up only to cool it down, they don't get it at first," said David Berokoff, a technology development manager at SoCal Gas. "But all this technology has been around for a while. We're just trying to bring it together so we can get it out to our customers as soon as possible."

The initiative is the latest in a move by SoCal Gas and its parent, Sempra Energy, to wean businesses off gas and push them to use more solar power. For businesses, the technologies could mean substantial savings.

Beyond the potential environmental benefits -- the sun is a nonpolluting, renewable source of energy -- the solar systems undergoing tests could help businesses slash air conditioning costs as much as 60%, Berokoff said.

The effort may seem counterproductive for one of the nation's largest natural gas distributors, but it's part of a broader move by the company to reposition itself as a renewable energy provider, SoCal Gas officials said. Sempra, which also owns San Diego Gas and Electric Co., expects to spend $10 million this year researching and developing "green technologies."

The research project is only 4 months old and solar-powered cooling probably won't reach the gas company's customers for another year or two, but the gas company is already wooing businesses to the rooftop of its Downey research facility.

"When they make an investment in this sort of technology, they are in fact keeping their company viable and making sure they are changing as their customers' needs change," said Bob Phillips, a spokesman for Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Southern California, which is watching the tests to see whether such technologies would make sense for several of its bottling plants. "It's a very long-term view, but it's the right view to have."

The gas company has been checking out competing solar-thermal cooling technologies from two companies to see which would work best on the roofs of warehouses, manufacturing plants and other commercial buildings.

The research could cut the cost of the systems and bring them to market sooner, Berokoff said.

The rooftop prototype systems, which include the mirrors, pipes and computer-automated solar trackers, cost about $200,000 each -- about the same cost as the entire traditional air conditioning system installed in the 45,000-square-foot Downey building, he said.

The developers hope to slash that price by at least half before it reaches commercial customers.

SoCal Gas is comparing systems developed by Sopogy Inc., based in Honolulu, and HelioDynamics of Britain. The testing is expected to run until the middle or end of next year, he said, after which SoCal Gas plans to compare the results with similar mirror-based systems from other manufacturers.

Sopogy's and HelioDynamics' systems are similar: Both use mirrors to aim the sun's rays at water pipes, and when sun isn't available to heat the water -- at night, for example -- both rely on gas as a backup.

The differences between the two systems lie in the shape and size of the mirrors used and in the placement of the water pipes.

Sopogy uses several 12-foot mirrors that curve upward, reflecting sunshine onto a pipe running just above the center of each mirror. HelioDynamics uses slabs of small, flat mirrors that reflect the sun's rays onto a single pipe above them.

Both systems use computer-automated trackers to tilt the mirrors throughout the day as the sun moves across the sky.

The hot water in both systems is heated to temperatures just under 200 degrees and collected in a storage tank. Then it goes through an absorption chiller that cools the cold water used in the building's fan units.

Non-solar systems use gas or electricity to heat the hot water before it goes through the chiller.

Sempra likes that the two solar systems can work alongside existing gas and electric systems, said Hal Snyder, vice president of customer solutions for SoCal Gas.

"People want renewable sources of energy, but we don't think people want a switch that just happens overnight," Snyder said. "By using gas or electricity as a backup, we're not having to replace our infrastructure, and our customers know they won't have to get into something experimental."

The demonstrations are also helping developers of the technology, said Al Yuen, Sopogy's director of corporate development.

"The gas company is giving us a stage to demonstrate what we can do for their customers," Yuen said. "They bought our mirrors, bought our system, and now they're using it and showing it off. It helps tremendously."

Another benefit for the developers, Yuen said, is seeing the systems in daily use, up against competitors' -- with all the information shared.

This information from the project will be a deciding factor for most SoCal Gas and Sempra customers when the technology hits the market, Coca-Cola's Phillips said.

"It's easier to take that plunge when you have an example of the technology in place and you can point to numbers and say, 'That's effective, that saves money, that's worth doing,' " he said.

nathan.olivarezgiles@ latimes.com
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  #12  
Old 08-27-2009, 12:36 PM
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Post New solar-cell efficiency record set (Scientific American)

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Here's a seemingly simple solar power factoid: the sun bathes Earth with enough energy in one hour (4.3 x 10^20 joules) to more than fill all of humanity's present energy use in a year (4.1 x 10^20 joules). So how to convert it? In the world of solar energy harvesting, there's a constant battle between cost and efficiency. On the one hand, complex and expensive triple-junction photovoltaic cells can turn more than 40 percent of the (specially concentrated) sunlight that falls on them into electricity. On the other, cheap, plastic solar cells under development convert less than 5 percent.

In between, ubiquitous photovoltaics—the multicrystalline silicon solar panels cropping up on rooftops across the country and, indeed, the world—struggle to balance the need for (relatively) easy manufacturing and low cost with technology to get the most electrons for your solar buck.

Yesterday, Spectrolab announced that its newest triple-junction solar cells had achieved the world record in efficiency, converting 41.6 percent of specially concentrated sunlight into electricity. All told, a tiny cell just 0.3174 square centimeters turned the sunlight equivalent of nearly 364 suns into 4.805 watts. That kind of efficiency is why 60 percent of satellites in orbit today bear earlier iterations of the technology; that's a total of roughly 640 kilowatts of Spectrolab cells circling Earth.

Those cells cost 40 cents per watt, according to the manufacturer—if you happen to have the sunlight equivalent of 500 suns streaming down while enjoying a temperature of 25 degrees Celsius. In reality, only specialized applications like satellites (and government contractors or agencies like NASA) can afford the technology.

More Earth-bound photovoltaics, like Suntech's Pluto line of multicrystalline cells, which boasts 17.2 percent efficiency converting one sun's light into electricity, or Suniva's ARTisun single silicon crystal cells that can convert 18.5 percent of the sunshine into electricity, cost more than $2 per watt. Installation roughly doubles that price.

Bringing the cost of just the photovoltaic cells down to about $1 per watt is the magic number solar manufacturers are aiming for, figuring that will make them cost-competitive with electricity produced by burning natural gas. Some manufacturers of thin film cells (less efficient but cheaper), such as First Solar, claim to have reached that mark, with efficiencies around 10 percent. Finding a way to further boost the ability to convert sunlight into electricity while also lowering costs to this level would herald the true dawn for solar power—something anticipated since photovoltaics were discovered.

editor's note: 10^20 is the same as 10 to the twentieth power, but computer and typewriter keyboards don't have the capability to do superscripts, even though computers have the capability, as noted here¹ ² ³

Last edited by myocardia; 09-03-2009 at 02:24 PM.
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  #13  
Old 08-27-2009, 12:36 PM
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Post Celebrating the birth of the solar cell (Scientific American)

Editor's Note: Scientific American 's George Musser will be chronicling his experiences installing solar panels and taking other steps to save energy in 60-Second Solar . Read his introduction here and see all posts here . I came across the following unbylined news story from our June 1954 issue which I thought solarheads would enjoy. Not only does it recount the invention of the photovoltaic ...

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Power From the Sun

A little wafer of adulterated silicon which converts sunlight directly into electrical energy was unveiled last month by Bell Telephone Laboratories. This solar battery is an outgrowth of transistor research. It works at an efficiency of 6 percent, which is comparable to the performance of an ordinary gasoline engine. Bell scientists believe that the figure can be raised to 10 per cent through straightforward engineering improvements. An assembly of wafers covering a square yard could turn out 50 watts of power. The device is not likely to replace large-scale power plants—a 30,000-kilowatt battery would have to cover some 100 acres—but the company expects it to be useful as a small power source for such applications as rural telephone systems.

The battery operates on the same principle that underlies the junction transistor, described by Morgan Sparks in Scientific American for July 1952. A "p-n junction" is set up in a silicon crystal. This means that the crystal is divided into two zones, one containing an impurity which produces an excess of movable electrons, the other an impurity which entraps electrons and produces movable "holes" (spaces where electrons should be). Across the junction between two such zones there is always a small voltage. A quantum of light falling on the junction may knock loose an electron from one of the crystal atoms, creating an electron-and-hole pair. Because of the existing voltage difference, the electron is pushed one way and the hole the other. If the zones are connected by an external circuit, a current will flow.

What has made possible the extraction of usable quantities of power from the arrangement is the discovery of a way to make large area junctions. In the solar battery a strip, about the size of a razor blade, of n-type silicon (containing arsenic) is treated with a gas containing a p-type impurity (boron). Bell engineers have found a way to control precisely the amount of boron taken up and the depth to which it penetrates. They produce a p-type layer less than one 10,000th of an inch thick, with a sharp boundary, over the entire strip. Thus, the whole surface becomes a source of current when sunlight falls on it.
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Old 08-29-2009, 06:50 AM
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Post HOPEWELL VALLEY: School district earns money though use of solar energy (Hopewell Val

The Hopewell Valley Regional School District recently collected $28,571 in revenue under the state’s Solar Renewable Energy Certificate (SREC) program, which rewards businesses, homeowners and others for producing clean energy.

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Old 08-29-2009, 07:50 PM
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Post West Morris high schools to go solar (Observer-Tribune)

WASHINGTON TWP.-- If technical details go according to plan, both West Morris Regional high schools will add solar panels to their rooflines by October 2010 and begin reaping significant savings on their electricity bills.

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Old 08-29-2009, 10:50 PM
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Post Grants create largest solar arrays in Chester (The Phoenix)

WEST CHESTER - Three solar grants recently announced by state Sen. Andy Dinniman will create the largest solar arrays in Chester County.

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  #17  
Old 08-30-2009, 12:28 AM
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Default Solar happenings and other news

Thread is for news events and other related solar events that may not need its own thread.
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  #18  
Old 08-30-2009, 07:07 AM
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Default Re: Solar Changing the World News and Events

HOPEWELL VALLEY: School district earns money though use of solar energy
New solar energy systems at Timberlane and Bear Tavern garnered money for the district.
Thursday, August 20, 2009 10:32 AM EDT
By John Tredrea, Staff Writer






The Hopewell Valley Regional School District recently collected $28,571 in revenue under the state’s Solar Renewable Energy Certificate (SREC) program, which rewards businesses, homeowners and others for producing clean energy.

New solar energy systems at Timberlane Middle School and Bear Tavern Elementary School garnered the money for the district.

”SRECs are one of the financial incentives the state has created to encourage the development of solar power in New Jersey,” district spokeswoman JoAnn Meyer said. “Under the program, operators of solar systems earn credits for every 1,000 kilowatt hours generated. Those credits may then be purchased, at market prices, by electric suppliers, private businesses and others, such as brokers.”

NJSREC.com, the broker the district is using to sell its credits, intends to sell quarterly. NJSREC.com represents nearly 400 solar system operators in New Jersey, most of which are private homeowners. Hopewell Valley and Montgomery Township schools are the only public school districts represented.

The largest buyer of SRECs are electric suppliers, which are required by the state to get a minimum of 0.16 percent of the power they sell in 2009 from solar systems. The minimum in- creases every year through 2021.
Electric suppliers buy credits if they fall short of that level or risk financial penalties, currently $711 per megawatt hour.

SRECs, which are sold at market prices, have been ranging between $300 and $611 per megawatt hour, according to the Web site of the New Jersey Office on Clean Energy.

Income from the solar credits is helping to shorten the payback period on the $350,000-per solar-system investment, said Bob Colavita, the school district’ business administrator. State rebates of 40 percent have also helped, he noted.

”When we put these systems in, we were figuring it would be seven to 10 years before they paid for themselves,” said Mr. Colavita. “But we might be looking at something closer to five to seven years.”

Timberlane’s system, mounted on the roof near the front of the school, was installed in summer 2008. Bear Tavern’s system went online this past spring.

Throughout New Jersey, there are nearly 3,500 solar systems with a capacity of producing 63 megawatts of power, according to Ms. Meyer.

HOPEWELL VALLEY: School district earns money though use of solar energy | CentralJersey.com
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  #19  
Old 09-02-2009, 09:15 AM
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Default Re: Solar Changing the World News and Events

Solar panels may 'create 22,500 jobs' Aussie
Wednesday, September 02, 2009 » 05:35pm



A trade union says 22,500 new jobs will be created over 10 years if solar energy is supported.

A trade union says 22,500 new jobs will be created over 10 years across the country if the Rudd government encourages the installation of rooftop solar panels.

The Electrical Trades Union (ETU) of Victoria launched its Job Creation report into the solar panel industry on Wednesday with the support of Greens leader Bob Brown.

'The report shows thousands of new jobs would be created by the introduction of this scheme, jobs for installers, electricians, jobs in retail and marketing,' Senator Brown said.

'The employment benefits would be spread around the country.'

Senator Brown said he would be taking the report to the Senate in support of the Greens Renewable Energy Amendment Bill introduced last November by Senator Christine Milne.

He said the government and the coalition had spoken in favour of Senator Milne's bill but the government had not taken any action to bring a national focus to the issue.

ETU state secretary Dean Mighell said the only way to create jobs in the industry was to pay generators for the electricity they produced from their panels.

He said if the scheme was applied to commercial sites, such as shopping centres and supermarkets, there was potential for the solar manufacturing industry to be revived in Australia.
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Old 02-03-2010, 04:52 PM
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Default Re: Solar Changing the World News and Events

How Big is this Solar Farm that will be Constructed in Cle Elum and can this Solar farm can supply a Country like America?
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