40% Efficiency Solar Cells Developed
gtada writes "A story published at Physorg.com discusses recently published research into the fabrication of solar cells that surpass the 40% efficiency milestone. Such devices would be the high water-mark to date, and hint at the possibility of even more effective technology. 'In the design, multijunction cells divide the broad solar spectrum into three smaller sections by using three subcell band gaps. Each of the subcells can capture a different wavelength range of light, enabling each subcell to efficiently convert that light into electricity. With their conversion efficiency measured at 40.7%, the metamorphic multijunction concentrator cells surpass the theoretical limit of 37% of single-junction cells at 1000 suns, due to their multijunction structure.'"
There is really no shortage of sunlight anyways. If only solar cells could be made cheaply. I suppose this will be great for satellites though.
It's another gallium-based technology. That's going to limit it. There's just not that much gallium available. 30%+ efficient cells using gallium have been around for a few years, but other than on spacecraft, and the Stanford Solar Car, they're too expensive to be useful. They talk about "concentrator cells", but that means mirrors and trackers, running up the system cost.
Citation: King, R. R., Law, D. C., Edmondson, K. M., Fetzer, C. M., Kinsey, G. S., Yoon, H., Sherif, R. A., and Karam, N. H. "40% efficient metamorphic GaInP/GaInAs/Ge multijunction solar cells." Applied Physics Letters 90, 183516 (2007).
Yes, and we have the nuclear waste for oh, I don't know, a few HUNDRED THOUSAND years ...
Only with stupid old technology. The Integral Fast Reactor generates 100 times less waste and it's only hotter than ore for a few hundred years. We should be building one at Yucca Mountain as a national security priority.
Fusion will be great in 40+ years, but that's a little late to act. We could have one of these running in probably 5 years.
Solar, at 40% efficiency would still require covering something like 8% of the land surface area of Earth to meet current-day demands. Wind is too variable, hydro is too small - we basically have coal and nuclear as the two viable baseload options.
Obviously, TBPB don't want to end anthropogenic global warming. It's left as an exercise to the reader to speculate on why.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
Solar is great and all but what about the moon? Sometimes it's bright as hell out there but does lunar power get any press? Nooooooooo.
Need Mercedes parts ?