Solar Shingles
buzban writes "Wired is carrying a cool story about a solar panel technology with a form factor like roofing shingles. Sort of a beowulf cluster of small, (relatively) attractive solar panels, if you will..."
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Now how to keep kids with ladders from walking on your roof scuffing up the solar shingles.. Or people who have low roofs (there's one near my house, actually it's right across the street) where you can walk from the ground right up onto the roof in the back).
Ah, you found me!
A duplex just down the block had these installed 4 years ago. Every time I go by, I'm tempted to ask them if they still work.
"Eve of Destruction", it's not just for old hippies anymore...
Hail Storm.
This sounds like a great idea. I'd be all over it except that at least once a year some part of the metro area where I live gets pounded with hail.
I didn't see anything in the article about how these tiles would be manufactured to survive this or heavy wet snow.
the future is here, it is just not evenly distributed - w. gibson
How about paving roads with solar panels, under some hard (metamaterial) transparent aluminum? About 16M hectares of America is paved road and parking, so 20W:m^2 (of the 1KW:m^2 peak insolation) would give 32GW. That's 3.2E13W, when US power consumption is 1E13.
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make install -not war
"Pernick said solar roofs would probably be adopted most quickly in states such as Hawaii and California where the cost differential between electricity derived from solar and fossil fuels is not as great."
I lived in Hawaii for almost four years. Very few people use solar. Even for hot water. Instead they use electricity that is supplied by diesil burning plants.
I talked to native Hawaiians about solar and mostly got blank stares-- even from one guy in HVAC. The only people out there using solar are hippies or those who just happened to move into an apartment or house with solar.
Most people don't think about solar. Just like most people don't think about coal/NG/nuclear/hydro turbines. If solar is going to happen, it's going to take a concerted effort by... somebody. I'd assume it would be in the government's best interest, but apparently it's more important to fight for oil.
Best of all, it's a fit-once solution that will last as long as any other material might be reasonable expected to, off-setting energy demand all the while. Oh, and the colour is a rather fetching blue-violet depending on where you view it from :)
Here's a few more examples:
Research on photovoltaics in cladding systems done here in the UK at Southampton Uni.
The German cladding manufacturer Schüco has a variety of well-developed photovoltaic cladding systems:
More European examples
A 60KW solar roof cladding installation in Berkeley, California.
If I were out to build a new home, I would certainly consider this as a source of power. Even if you are not storing the power in a large battery bank, using what you generate to suplement your existing grid power would cause a decrease in your overall electric costs. Now, there's that whole capex vs opex discussion (cost of shingles vs potential monthly savings + maint costs) which would come into play.. I've mentioned solar and wind powered systems in the past.. if you dig, you can probally find my previous comments on the topic..