Caltech Makes Flexible, 86% Efficient Solar Arrays
strredwolf writes "Caltech has released a flexible solar array that converts 95% of single-wavelength incandescent light and 86% of all sunlight into electricity. Instead of being flat-panel, they stand thin silicon wires in a plastic substrate that scatters the light onto them. The total composition is 98% plastic, 2% wire — the amount of silicon used is 1/50th that of ordinary panels. So as soon as they can get these to market, solar could be very viable and cheap to produce." Update: 03/01 21:02 GMT by KD : Reader axelrosen points out evidence that the 80%+ efficiency figure is wrong. MIT's Tech Review, in covering the Caltech announcement, says that the new panel's efficiency is in the 15%-20% range — which is competitive with the current state of the art. And the Caltech panel should be far cheaper to manufacture.
This is exactly the kind of innovation the U.S. needs for carbon-friendly jobs.
Carbon friendly?! Dude, they are planning to reduce the amount of carbon being burned.
I don't think it's jew-friendly to burn jews.
I think it'd be perfectly justifiable to fire all the teachers to fund this. Even if it all ended up being hype.
I guess big oil, energy and coal companies are already in talks about take-over on the new startup.
Just to prevent it from ever entering the market.
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