7/30/2010 5:46:37 PM
7/30/2010 5:48:15 PM
7/30/2010 6:11:37 PM
7/30/2010 6:13:30 PM
7/30/2010 6:22:47 PM
bump
5/18/2011 2:44:51 PM
WHY? IS THERE SOME GOOD NEWS ON THE SUNPOWER FRONT?
5/18/2011 2:46:55 PM
Wake me up when they can convert more than merely IR.
5/18/2011 3:27:55 PM
I didn't request the bump but I did see this?http://www.grist.org/list/2011-05-18-solar-breakthrough-could-lead-to-90-percent-efficient-panels-som
5/18/2011 3:46:21 PM
The majority of the suns energy falls in the spectral sensitivity of Silicon already. Capturing the MWIR and LWIR bands will not get you a 60% jump in efficiency.I don't know what all of this antenna business is, but it sounds like a stupid research project.
5/18/2011 4:12:28 PM
5/18/2011 4:13:57 PM
There's still some decent intensity from the infrared range, but the highest intensity of light can be found in the visible region of the solar spectrumbut by merely 'expanding' the range in which light can be absorbed doesn't necessarily mean an increase in efficiency, if we're speaking in terms of ([energy out] / [photons in]) *100also, by developing solid materials that have bandgaps low enough to absorb such low frequency photons you are also going to run into electron-hole recombination issues, which is already a tough area to tackle with current solar technology.best of luck to him though, i hope he gets his funding and everything works exactly as described
5/18/2011 5:35:51 PM
5/19/2011 8:09:59 AM
5/19/2011 10:12:35 AM
5/19/2011 10:27:14 AM
You're overthinking this; energy is still cheapest at night. If you're going to isntall solar panels, then switch to TOU metering and adjust all of your appliances to run at night as much as possible.
5/19/2011 11:16:34 AM
Mine is not, its the same rate at all times. There is no peak/off peak rates on my bill.
5/19/2011 11:52:59 AM
it's still cheaper for the utility to generate at night, and you're going to see mandatory TOU metering in the next few years. Maryland is pushing for it hard right now. Why not go ahead and take advantage of the optional enrollment TOU systems offered by most utilities?
5/19/2011 12:00:24 PM
^^ only because of the default pay structure you are opted in to. I think most major utilities these days have TOU options.
5/19/2011 12:02:18 PM
^^ Misleading. It is not "cheaper" to produce electricity at night, there is just less demand and therefore a buyers market.
5/19/2011 4:15:02 PM
^it IS cheaper because they don't have to run at full capacity.[Edited on May 19, 2011 at 5:00 PM. Reason : ]
5/19/2011 4:59:44 PM
No, it is cheaper because they don't want to shut down. Throttling back a nuclear reactor or Coal plant makes them work less efficiently, and shutting them down at night wastes everything (fuel, labor, capital, etc). As such, they cut the price of power at night to boost demand and keep the plants throttled up. [Edited on May 19, 2011 at 5:23 PM. Reason : .,.]
5/19/2011 5:22:13 PM
Federal law prohibits throttling back nuclear plants, so that's not even an option. regardless, our peaking plants are mostly gas turbine units that are much more expensive to run than steam plants. For that reason, generation is cheaper at night than it is during the day because we can use cheaper plants. You also have to consider wheeling charges on transmission lines, which is what caused the blackouts in California years back. Generation isn't always the driving factor.There are a slew of other reasons to make electricity cheaper at night. the grid becomes unstable under extremely low load, nukes can't be throttled back, and coal plants are costly to shut down.
5/19/2011 5:44:08 PM
5/20/2011 12:32:47 AM
nope, peaking plants are typically run only during the daytime in months when air-conditioning loads are high. You're trying to describe a load follower plant, which typically is a combined cycle plant if it was built in the last 20 or so years. Even the load-following plants are more expensive to run than our base load coal plants, so my statement about electricity being cheaper to generate at night still holds true.Outside of peak shaving duties for a few municipals and generation on a few islands, I've never seen piston engines used for any grid generation purpose. They typically don't get big enough to generate anything worthwhile. IIRC, a 20MW diesel generator costs more initially than a 60MW gas turbine with diesel run capability, and the maintenance and downtime on the diesel is higher.
5/20/2011 7:51:13 AM
Solar/fuel cell combos would be great for distributed generation... there is a lot of research* going on with different catalysts to make splitting water into hydrogen and oxygen more efficient. This way a home's power could come from a fuel cell using hydrogen produced by electricity from the solar cells during the day. * http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/05/110516102331.htm (for example)
5/20/2011 8:22:05 AM
PGN uses gas turbines for load followers and peak demand generation. Obviously, the cost per kWh to generate on coal and nuclear is considerably less than the cost to run on gas. Since regulated utilities can only charge a fixed rate and you pay the same thing no matter how much they pay to generate it, the less they rely on the gas turbines, the higher their margin. They cut you a deal on TOU plans so that you use your power when they have the greatest profit margin.
5/20/2011 9:02:12 AM
How about something like this for emergencies?http://mysolarbackup.com/Disregard the Alex Jones comments. Focus on the device.
5/20/2011 12:09:28 PM