Laser Scribing Promises More Efficient Solar Cells
cylonlover writes "A new manufacturing method that incorporates laser technology may result in thin film solar panels that are less expensive and more efficient than anything presently on the market. Currently, a stylus is used to mechanically etch microchannels into such panels, which electrically connect the individual solar cells and allow them to form an array. Researchers from Indiana's Purdue University, however, are developing a technique in which an ultrafast pulsing laser is used to do the etching. Not only will it hopefully be quicker and cheaper than mechanical 'scribing,' but it should also produce cleaner, sharper microchannels that offer superior performance."
Won't solar panels be so cheap in 5 years that only rich people will burn candles and/or oil?
It seems every other month someone comes up with a new technique to cut solar panel costs in half or double efficiency, & while they are getting cheaper, faster, more mainstream it's as though a clusterfuck of patents restricts the application to a single factory. I recall years back I was watching NOVA or Frontline or something where they where interviewing that photovoltaic paint company & they where saying they had a giant back-order & I just kept thinking...why not license the technology? You'll still come out ahead!
Laser scribing/ablation has been used since the 80's, for reducing the cost (and hence price) of solar cells. E.g. buried contact solar cells..
Using laser ablation to reduce the manufacturing cost of solar cells is so old news, that I almost don't even remember it, it has been so long ago.
"The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
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Solar panels cost more per watt now than 5 years ago, and their lowest cost per watt was about 6-7 years ago. Even if we are getting more efficient at making them the demand is going up much faster, on top of that sooner or later we are going to run up against the limited availability of raw materials.
That was my conclusion also. Add to that the high chance your investment will become obsolete, and photovoltaics are really not worth doing. I'd like the payback to be no more than 10 years.
Solar thermal, that is, heating water, is a better bet. No $10000 inverter and battery system needed to collect all those DC outputs and convert them to 120V AC or whatever standard you're on. Efficiency is much higher too. Last I heard, commercially available photovoltaics are still around only 15% to 20%, while thermal can conceivably reach 100%. At the least, I'm waiting for those 40% efficiencies labs are reporting on experimental photovoltaics. And better batteries, and cheaper inverters.
Had quite a few storm window salespeople try to persuade me to upgrade the cruddy original windows on our 70's house. I worked out the math for a 10 year return, and concluded the absolute most I could justify was $4000, and that was pushing it, being very generous with the estimates on energy savings and supposed increase in the value of the home. If it could be done for $2000, it was definitely worth doing. But they couldn't get under $6000. That we already have a fairly efficient A/C (12 SEER, not quite up to the current mandated minimum of 13 SEER) doesn't help their case.
I did convert a 40 watt fluorescent fixture to the newer slimmer 32 watt standard. That wasn't worth doing either, but it didn't cost much, and I was curious. 32 watts works great.
Does your HOA allow clotheslines? I use a rack indoors. Ditching the clothes dryer is huge, and most people have no idea. But when I mention it, I always see the knee jerk refusal to change kick in. People love the damn things.
Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
The worst natural disaster in recorded history occurred less than a week ago, and you people are discussing a new manufacturing method that incorporates laser technology that may result in thin film solar panels that are less expensive and more efficient than anything presently on the market???? My *god*, people, GET SOME PRIORITIES!
The bodies of nearly 10,000 dead people could give a good god damn about the advent of LAN parties, your childish Lego models, your nerf toys and lack of a "fun" workplace, your Everquest/Diablo/D&D addiction, or any of the other ways you are "getting on with your life".
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Wow. Has it been a month already, since the last amazing breakthrough I heard about, concerning solar panels. Seems like i've been hearing stories like this since the late 90's. And, yet I still cant afford them. Sure, they are in my calculators... They are not in my car nor my house, nor any other car or house I see. I live in a pretty average middle-class neighborhood. What gives? I must have read over 30 articles like this in the last 5 years. (One every two months, I know) Why do I see rolls of these things in home depot for the price of a cheap carpet?
Already said it.
After Japan and Libya, wind and solar are likely to get a bit of a boost.
Build your own energy sources from scratch. http://otherpower.com/
BP manufactured laser etched solar cells in the early 1990s.
You know, I've been hearing these kinds of announcements from the solar panel industry for over 5 years now. Revolutionary technologies, breakthrough announcements...blah blah blah. Costs have not gone down substantially and I still haven't seen anyone breaking the $1/watt barrier, not unless you buy the panels by the pallet. I will believe them when they deliver.
With the dozens and dozens of discoveries and innovations over the years, you'd think solar power wouldn't stink as much as it still does. It still costs an arm and a leg to get a system installed at ones house. The companies that do install at residences go belly up and the home owners are left with a colossus on their homes that can not be services. There are many homes within a mile radius, who have skeletal systems for solar power and no panels actually working.
There needs to be as much, or more research done in making the companies selling end user solutions viable, than there are in the panels themselves.
Kind of funny reading the debate on whether solar is finally ready for prime time since I see it dam near everywhere here in Germany. The country is pumping A BILLION euros per MONTH into solar installations. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_power_in_Germany Pretty impressive what an economy unencumbered by a couple foreign wars can afford to invest in. Enjoy.
This ain't no upwardly mobile freeway This is the road to hell
Are you even trying to make sense?
Well, so what? People don't run their air conditioners, water heaters or factories in the middle of the night.