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Solar Panels As Building Clothing

Makarand writes "A Canadian company is developing a flexible solar-power generating material that can be draped over any building. This will allow buildings with curves and complex shapes to use solar panels. The new material is made of silicon beads, each acting as a solar cell, placed between two aluminum foils and sealed on the sides with plastic. The manufacturing process for the silicon beads can use waste silicon from the chip-making industry. The material has an overall efficiency of 11 per cent which is comparable to the performance of conventional photovoltaic cells. The material looks like blue denim and architects might love to work with it."

6 of 198 comments (clear)

  1. Homepage by mjgamble · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.spheralsolar.com/

    Somewhat old really. July 17th they announced this and their 20 megawatt pilot plant came online October 31st it looks like.

  2. Link to more of the technology by phoenix_orb · · Score: 4, Informative

    Slashdot has a way of posting news, but no backup information sometimes. Or maybe I am the only one who actually reads the articles.... Here is an overview of the technology. Here is a link to the company making this product, speral solar power. Not much in great detail about the strength of these products, other than "very strong" or "stronger than regular solar cells".

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  3. Nice troll. Wrong too. by twilight30 · · Score: 4, Informative

    As someone now employed in photovoltaics, I have to ask you this. Most commercially-available solar panels of the silicon variety are derived from purified sand. Pure silicon does not exist naturally, so silicon dioxide (duh, sand) is broken down and refined into ingots. How is this environmentally unfriendly?

    If you're talking about GaAs-panels (cells), they are dirty, I'll grant you that. They are not, however, at all popular. The largest makers of PV are Kyocera, Sharp, RWE Schott Solar and Astropower. None, as far as I know, are selling exotic PV cells or modules in any numbers. They're expensive, and the current technology offers enough benefits to outweigh the point of bothering with fancy stuff.

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  4. Much older by DaChesserCat · · Score: 5, Informative

    This tech is much older. Take a look at this article (note: it's a .pdf file). I first read about this stuff in 1993. Texas Instruments started developing this 1983 (yes, that's two decades ago), finally abandoned it and licensed it to someone else.

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  5. Re:Here is a picture by smiff · · Score: 5, Informative
    of the demo House

    And here is a picture of the material in production

    Score:4, Informative???? The first link points to siding which has nothing to do with solar power, or Spheral Solar Power, Inc.. The second link points to a picture of a denim apparel factory in China.

    If you want to learn more about the product, go to the company's web site.

  6. Solar naysayers consider this by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 4, Informative


    Solar shingles with a 20 year warranty. Available today.

    I don't know about the rest of the country, but our household budget electric bill averages $82 bucks a month. 20 years, 240 months, that's $19,680 for 20 years of electricy. This site above has a $10K and a $22K system.

    Now if you subract the cost of a new roof the deal looks even better. Raise the value of the property, if you live in a sunny area you can even get paid for feeding energy back into the grid. After all a whole roof solar panel that even has some shade functionality would be pretty productive.

    Why aren't these at least being put on more new homes?? What a selling point.

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