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GeneralRe: Wordle 851 Pin
OriginalGriff18-Oct-23 2:23
mveOriginalGriff18-Oct-23 2:23 
GeneralRe: Wordle 851 Pin
pkfox18-Oct-23 10:21
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OriginalGriff18-Oct-23 19:52
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GeneralRe: Wordle 851 (5/6) Pin
Jeremy Falcon18-Oct-23 4:10
professionalJeremy Falcon18-Oct-23 4:10 
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StarNamer@work18-Oct-23 4:56
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jmaida18-Oct-23 9:16
jmaida18-Oct-23 9:16 
GeneralSolar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
trønderen17-Oct-23 12:53
trønderen17-Oct-23 12:53 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
Gary Stachelski 202117-Oct-23 22:09
Gary Stachelski 202117-Oct-23 22:09 
First, all ideas have merit and an idea that seems crazy today can suddenly become possible with technological break throughs tomorrow.

Second, I do not have degrees in any of the supporting fields for what I am going to share, so take what I say with a grain of salt.

What I know about solar cells and their low efficiency. A solar cell converts light (which exists as both a photon and wave) into an electrical current. The solar cell is composed of two materials that are bonded together. There is an electrical barrier where the two materials meet. When light shines on the material we must consider the dual nature of the light. As a wave it has a wavelength (hold this thought, I will get back to it in a moment). As a photon light packs a wallop when it collides with either the atoms of the material or the electron cloud that surrounds the atom. What we want to do is to have the photon collide with the electron cloud and pass the momentum that the photon is carrying on to the electron, breaking the electron away from the atom and sending it over the barrier to the other material on the other side of the barrier. The barrier can be thought of as a hill that separates the two materials. Once the electron passes over the top of the hill it rolls down into the other material and can't go back. As more and more electrons roll over the hill the material on that side of the barrier becomes negative and the material that was stripped of electrons becomes positive. Connect a wire between the two sides and electricity will flow.

But there is a complication to happy state of electron flow. The wave length of the light. If the wave length is too long the atoms of the material and not the electron cloud absorb the momentum of the light photons. This shows up as heat, the atoms of the material begin to giggle around more and more. This becomes a problem because as the atoms bounce around more the barrier weakens (the hill gets lower) and electrons begin to cross back over from the other side to their original side. So heat is a killer problem for solar cells. If the wave length is too short the photons pass through the material like it was transparent (like a glass window) and strike whatever mounting material is holding the cells. So only a narrow band of light wave lengths will do the magic of getting electrons to flow in the material.

A solution to the wave length problem is to find two more materials that work with the shorter wave lengths and create a solar sandwich of materials. Each set of materials picking off a different narrow band of light wave lengths. This is exactly what you are reading about in the announcements from labs that are experimenting with thin films that have the materials vapor deposited on the film material. These thin films are sandwiched together to convert more wave lengths of light. These are pushing efficiency claims to near 40% and in some cases beyond.

There are problems with these lab methods. One; can the thin films be reliably coated with the chemicals (the yield of usable cells per meter of material). The second is management of heat. The films that hold the chemical materials accumulate heat (sandwich more films together and trap more heat) and as we know heat is a killer for the solar electric effect. (even more so when you are vapor coating a thin film, there is not much material to mess with). Another is longevity of the materials. Oxygen in our atmosphere is very corrosive and will degrade many of the thin film composites. The industry generally wants a 25-30 year 80% rule. Where a solar cell that is deployed in the field will continue to generate at 80 percent of it's max rating after 25 - 30 years. Many of the labs are trying to do rapid aging tests to satisfy this metric since they really don't want to wait 25-30 years before going into production, but electric companies don't want to buy cells that are not rated for the minimal longevity.

So new solar cell materials show much promise, but it will be a while for new materials to make it into the accepted commercial deployment.

Hydro power generation is taking advantage of mega evaporation cycles in the earth's weather patterns to take water deposited in a high area and generate power by controlling it's flow to a lower altitude (usually a drop of several hundred feet. A column of water several hundred feet high weighs a lot and can overcome the massive torque requirements for the turbine generators.)

Converting heat to electric power is tricky. To get the pressure you need to overcome the magnetic field resistance in the coils of the generator, you generally need a large difference in the hot side versus the cold side of the heat conversion machinery. This translates into large pressure changes. So glass tubes might need to be replaced with copper or aluminum or titanium tubes depending on the heat and pressure. The amount of work that can be extracted from a mechanical heat conversion is roughly proportional to the difference in the temperature of the gas or liquid from the hot side to the cold (or cooler) side. Big difference in temperature = lots of energy for work. Small difference in temperature = little energy available for work. If you are going to drive a turbine generator, then you need to estimate the amount of torque needed to turn the blades through one revolution. As an example, if you have a hybrid vehicle with regenerative breaking, you can feel the car slow rapidly when applying the regenerative brakes (it is converting the momentum stored in the car to electricity to charge the battery.) So there is a lot of resistance in turning the generator against the magnetic fields in the coils to generate the electricity. This is not to say that you can not scale a generator to be extremely tiny and reduce the torque requirements. I don't know how small you can go. I am not a mechanical engineer.

However, there are some advancements in nano engineering that are interesting. Just read an article where a university has created a nano material that creates a tiny electric flow from the humidity in the air. (sorry it's late and I don't have a link to post for the article). The theory is that as the humid air works it's way through the narrow nanometer scale channels it rubs against the walls and creates a static like charge, a small collection of free electrons, that can be extracted. Currently, too small for practical use, but if it scales it could mean that you never have to charge your smart watch, or other small wearable devices. They would power themselves from the humidity in the air.

Keep thinking and working on your idea. There might be something amazing that can come out of it.
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
Daniel Pfeffer17-Oct-23 18:28
professionalDaniel Pfeffer17-Oct-23 18:28 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
trønderen18-Oct-23 11:00
trønderen18-Oct-23 11:00 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
englebart19-Oct-23 7:33
professionalenglebart19-Oct-23 7:33 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
Sanjay K. Gupta17-Oct-23 20:09
professionalSanjay K. Gupta17-Oct-23 20:09 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
Amarnath S18-Oct-23 0:03
professionalAmarnath S18-Oct-23 0:03 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
trønderen18-Oct-23 10:59
trønderen18-Oct-23 10:59 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
megaadam17-Oct-23 21:31
professionalmegaadam17-Oct-23 21:31 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
trønderen18-Oct-23 10:34
trønderen18-Oct-23 10:34 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
snorkie18-Oct-23 2:16
professionalsnorkie18-Oct-23 2:16 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
Kent Sharkey18-Oct-23 7:15
staffKent Sharkey18-Oct-23 7:15 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
trønderen18-Oct-23 8:58
trønderen18-Oct-23 8:58 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
DerekT-P18-Oct-23 6:56
professionalDerekT-P18-Oct-23 6:56 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
trønderen18-Oct-23 9:53
trønderen18-Oct-23 9:53 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
DerekT-P18-Oct-23 23:36
professionalDerekT-P18-Oct-23 23:36 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
BarrRobot19-Oct-23 1:51
BarrRobot19-Oct-23 1:51 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
jschell19-Oct-23 5:34
jschell19-Oct-23 5:34 
GeneralRe: Solar energy - a (crazy?) idea Pin
englebart19-Oct-23 7:41
professionalenglebart19-Oct-23 7:41 

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