Solar Breakthrough Could Provide Power Without Solar Cells
An anonymous reader tips a University of Michigan news release about the creation of what's being called an "optical battery" that could lead to the use of solar power without traditional solar cells (abstract). Quoting:
"Light has electric and magnetic components. Until now, scientists thought the effects of the magnetic field were so weak that they could be ignored. What Rand and his colleagues found is that at the right intensity, when light is traveling through a material that does not conduct electricity, the light field can generate magnetic effects that are 100 million times stronger than previously expected. Under these circumstances, the magnetic effects develop strength equivalent to a strong electric effect. 'This could lead to a new kind of solar cell without semiconductors and without absorption to produce charge separation,' Rand said. 'In solar cells, the light goes into a material, gets absorbed and creates heat. Here, we expect to have a very low heat load. Instead of the light being absorbed, energy is stored in the magnetic moment. Intense magnetization can be induced by intense light and then it is ultimately capable of providing a capacitive power source.'"
New physics is *exactly* what's needed if the grandiose dreams of sci-fi are to become practical. This sounds like a tiny thing to allow cheaper solar power... What if a related effect then allows better fusion? Ah, then things are going to be good. We're running low on energy. We need this.
So how long until this becomes practical on a personal scale? I really want to see someone's ipod solar edition get stuck to a metal guardrail until the sun goes down.
In a bit of shameless internet panhandling, I accept Litecoin Donations at Lbd2oH9QsthD1GfuUXPyka12YxvWJYnBVf
I gotta wear shades!
The press office at U. Michigan has gone a long way from what they actually did to what they are speculating might be theoretically be possible. What they actually did was to predict a theoretical effect which has not yet been demonstrated. The press office then suggests that if you concentrate sunlight by a factor of a hundred million-- about seven hundred times higher than the theoretical concentration limit-- that this as-yet-unidentified material might be able to convert the light into electricity.
This is a bit speculative. They've predicted an interesting theoretical effect. Let's keep it at that, which is a nice piece of work, and leave the speculation to science fiction writers (like me).
http://www.geoffreylandis.com
And it must be focused to an intensity of 10 million watts per square centimeter.
That ought to be enough to melt the glass, don't you think?
Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
The trouble is that it's still cheap to get fossil fuels.
It's awesome that they are (apparently) directly generating electricity. Much better than the quaint method of boiling water to turn turbines.
I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
Electromagnetism consists of equal parts electricity and magnetism?
You mean... That fool Maxwell was right?
How can I believe you when you tell me what I don't want to hear?
If you have 10 million watts per square centimetre of light focussed on something there are far more efficient ways to convert it into useful power.
I believe they also state in the article that they are looking for materials that require less energy density. Right now, it's not practical, like most pending technologies announced on Slashdot. :-) Never mind the cost, it just doesn't actually even work. :-)
Currently hooked on AMP
So do we now have to ask "Solar cells - How the f*ck do they work??"
I'm really surprised that the article didn't mention "5 years" as a time scale for when this will be viable, since that's the typical duration mentioned in these sort of articles --- far enough in the future that most will have forgotten about it by the time we get there, but near enough to still feel like it's worth anticipating (in other words, the perfect length of time for a project that needs funding to continue, but may never actually produce desired results).
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
It's a wiki, for god's sake, couldn't you have deleted the image ref?
Go to dow's website, you can order solar roof shingles today. Not what the article is about but a product that is surely less than 30 years old.
Sure it's all great now, but what happens when we run out of sunlight?
I don't see what blackholes have to do with this.
I did not visit, but this is a GOATSE link.
Could this be placed in marijuana grow houses to harness some of the wasted energy to power a small meth lab?
Meth labs power themselves... with fire...
I agree with the general idea that there are lots of exaggerated claims and promises. I view that as most likely coming from people looking for grants or venture capitalists to fund their projects.
However I would not keep an eye to the shipping products to judge feasibility, I would keep an eye on satellites. Break throughs like the one in this story might first appear in the environment of much higher solar intensity found in space.
Yeah, it's amusing that nuclear power reactors can use the same method as a 1800's steam engine.
nope, still vaporware "WHEN CAN WE GET SOLAR SHINGLES? Although they’re not available for sale yet, POWERHOUSE Solar Shingles will be available in select U.S. markets by the end of 2011"
OMG, OMG. So who found this thing? John Galt?
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
Damn, I thought they had started shipping already. Sorry about that.
First that vague press report on the purportedly revolutionary (no pun intended) wave disk engine from Michigan state, now this. Did some sort of pronouncement go out that Michigan universities need to flog green technology to overcome the abject failure of Detroit ?
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Some progress but we're still behind in many ways: http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/02/quantum-photosynthesis/
A leaf may not be as efficient as some solar panels when directly compared, but a leaf actually builds itself. So the leaf might be more analogous to quantum tech "solar panels" plus factories building the panels, converting the raw materials, etc.
Some plants can even grow from a single leaf.
This looks like some really promising work. I still want to crush your football team on the gridiron, though. 3 Cheers for U of M Physics! 3 Cheers for Rich Rodriguez!
Yes, what would be great is if fossil fuels were really expensive and we actually had an energy crisis. We won't get efficient panels until all the factories are shut down.
If I can just reach out with my words and touch a butthole, just one, it will all be worth it.
The focus fusion guys aren't. They believe they can use high energy helium nuclei can be used to create net-positive electricity induction. It would be cool to go off of steam.
Might be for Dow, but looking for a couple of minutes on Google shows several companies that sell them.
i.e.: a blog from 2005/2006 and he had solar shingles back then.
This is what patents are for. Not that getting money from you clicking on my button.
At 10% effeciency I'm not understanding the appeal.
The light has to be concentrated which means tracking electronics, hardware, mirrors, maintenance..etc.
You can get about 30% effeciency today by pointing concentrated solar energy at a stirling engine.
The effect itself is more intersting to me than the possible use in solar energy.
And it must be focused to an intensity of 10 million watts per square centimeter.
That ought to be enough to melt the glass, don't you think?
Well it won't get hot if there is no absorption of the photons. Of course I don't see how it produces energy without absorbing the photons.
Basically the science writer was scrawling gibberish. There's probably something really interesting here but getting it from this article requires advanced degrees in Kremlinolgy and Tea Leaf reading to determine what the scientist really wanted to say.
My guess about what they are trying to say is that the energy is not being stored by promoting electrons from a valence band to a conduction band. It is some how being stored in a magnetic polarization of the media. I think it hints that this polarization can have an EMF to push mobile electrons.
I think the trick is this. Normally the magnetic fields from an E&M wave are not important but if you concentrate them enough you can extract energy. As long as you are also not doing electron-hole absorption to deplete it then this concentration can eventually become significant and the energy can be extracted in other ways.
Beyond that I have no guesses what the article might have wanted to say.
Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
That's because they don't pay their due externalities.
Dilbert RSS feed
... It would be cool to go off of steam.
I see what you did there.
I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
or it didn't happen. A working prototype is fine too.
2019 is going to be the year of Linux on the desktop.
I didn't know it was a wiki for all the goatse i was getting around my family
Stop giving the troll lulz! It's like a catnip to them!
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
That's not 'trouble'. That is the reason you get to sit around in an office all day writing bullshit on slashdot.
Nothing comes from it? During the last year, in most western countries below 50 degrees latitude, producing your own electricity using PV has become cheaper than electricity from the net if you count the taxes for the net electricity. And that's without government funding. Why did you think Google invests so much in that solar project of theirs? For their image? No, they're probably simply in it for the money.
The production capacity for PV panels already is 1/18th of the capacity we'd need for the entire world to produce all it's electricity with PV and replace all PV panels every 25 years.
But you're right; obviously new efficiency levels don't take off. Nor does solar paint. There's a reason for that and that's that only thing that counts is price per watt since at the moment we have more than enough surfaces exposed to the sun. Efficiency simply doesn't count. Most of those extremely efficient PV panels use rather rare materials; they're simply not worth the money nor will they ever be. Such things are interesting only in situations where weight (think sattelites) or efficiency (think airplanes or cars in the solar challenge etc.) matters a lot.
The problem isn't a lack of solar breakthroughs. We don't need them, the solar PV panels we have now are perfectly fine if not great. What we desperately need now is a breakthrough in energy storage so we can get through the night.
0x or or snor perron?!
...how long before we never hear about this one again?
All hail our decepticon overlords!
30 years ago, it took more energy to produce a solar panel then what it would produce in it's lifetime. Today that is not the case. That achievement alone is monumental. Your problem is that you can't see the connection between the announcement and the release of these products.
We've been over the energy- and cost-payback thresholds for solar power for quite some time. Even PV, which isn't quite as cost-effective as the solar thermal setups, has energy payback time in the 1-3 year range (depending on tech) and financial payback time well within warranty (with wide variation due to local insolation and electric rates).
Which is why we went ahead and stuck some on our roof. We're two years in, and four years from financial payback, and the system has a 25-year warranty. We're in a nearly best-case situation in Arizona, mind you-- our insolation is nearly double what it is in the midwest, and our primary load (air conditioning) tracks quite nicely with how sunny it is. But you can make your money back even in the pacific northwest.
The tipping point has come and gone, and it's only going to get gradually cheaper from this point on.
Actually, you didn't because focus fusion's experiments require minimum temperatures of a half billion degrees kelvin to acheive z-pinch.
Imagine a world where all the energy you'd ever need could be purchased by the kilowatt, for a reasonable cost - say, $0.50/watt. Suppose the most energy your house would ever draw is 10,000 watts (a hot day in Phoenix in July). For an initial outlay of "$5,000" (or so), the electrical needs of your home would be met forever.
Suppose this new understanding of the physics of light evolves to the point that it could power an automobile with just the surface area available on the roof.
Whatever will the millions of people who are employed by the energy industry do for work, when their jobs go *poof*?
Whatever will the hundreds of billionaires do with their "white elephant" investments in the energy industry? How will they maintain their status of living if their utility stocks can't pay dividends anymore?
The term "black swan" is applicable here. Most people here have so much faith in the "laws" of thermodynamics, that they can't imagine a world where that principle is just a special case of the universal law.
Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly.
www.teslabox.com
..It can be implemented main-stream, for less cost and be more efficient that current processes. Until then this is all just intellectual masturbation.
boycott slashdot February 10th - 17th check out: altSlashdot.org
30 years ago, photovoltaic panels cost almost $40 per watt.
Today, the cheap ones are about $2 per watt.
Mods, how is ignorance insightful?
He may be bullet-proof, have the ability to fly, be a great baseball player, and/or Santa Claus.
To paraphrase Ballmer: "Externalities! Externalities! Externalities!"
It's turtles all the way down, no one is paying all their due externalities.
The average energy payback time for silicon is 1-3 years. For thin film, it's a couple months.
Try again.
He may be bullet-proof, have the ability to fly, be a great baseball player, and/or Santa Claus.
Comparitively to what? What better method do you have to turn heat into electricity?
I wasn't aware there was a theoretical concentration limit. Where did you get that from and what's the rationale for it?
The theoretical concentration limit is straightforward-- it comes from the fact that the sun has a non-zero solid angle. Basically, a concentrator works by increasing the fraction of the sky that's filled by the sun, and the best you can do is to make the light come from the whole sky. (Well, there's also a factor of n, the refractive index).
The book Solar Electricity by T. Markvart gives a calculation (page 237-- it's available on googlebooks)
http://www.geoffreylandis.com
Go Michigan. This site http://peswiki.com/energy/News reported this story yesterday. It also reported a story from Michigan State University http://pesn.com/2011/04/14/9501810_Wave_Disk_Engine_Sips_Fuel/ about a new type of engine. So two big announcement about energy and they are both developed in Universities in the state of Michigan.
Yeah, there's a solar-shingle install on a model home just down the street from us. I couldn't tell you the brand-- but they're very clearly available.
WOOOOOOOSH
You need to restart your computer. Hold down the Power button for several seconds or press the Restart button.
He's hoping so hard for "breakthroughs" he's entirely missed four decades of gradual progress.
I thought that cat macros were catnip to trolls...
If it's in you sig, it's in your post.
That is part of the cycle of things. I work at a place that makes Bio-diesel among other things. When gas hit $4.00 a gallon a few year back, we had tons of people ready to invest money in our plant to expand our ability to make Bio-diesel and places ready to sign multi-year contracts to buy what we could make.. Then the cost of gas started to drop and no one wanted to invest money to expand our capabilities and we stopped making Bio-diesel. Gas prices back up, we can't make it fast enough and are considering expanding production and contracts are back on the table. Part of it is government subsidies as well as outside investors.
The tech people do the same. Last time gas got up to $4.00, there were all kinds of new techs being looked at, gas prices drop and all the tech is set aside and forgotten about. Some of it gets picked back up, some of it is sitting on a shelf and the person who did the initial R&D is no longer at the company so it is forgotten about. Or the company hired people to develop the tech and then prices drop, their money ran out, they laid everyone off and are now trying to get it going again, but don't have the resources.
If gas prices would get high and stay high, then new techs would emerge to draw us away from foreign oil. Hate to sound conspiracy nut, but all the oil people know this and gas prices can't stay high for long extended periods without people feeling the pain too much and new tech getting developed. OPEC has the ability to manipulate the market by controlling production and releasing more barrels.
Eventually we will really run out and then prices will go up and stay up and then the techs won't get put away and actually be developed. So while this idea may not pan out, some day an idea will pan out that is huge and will shift things away from foreign oil, but as long as the prices come back down in time to stop them from finishing the R&D on the cool new energy saver stuff and get it to market, people will keep falling back to oil as it is cheaper and what we are used to.
You can do the same thing by smearing a thin layer of ripe banana on graphite-coated paper. Nearly .5 watts per square meter.
All you need is paper, a fat pencil and a bunch of ripe bananas.
Yeah, it's amusing that nuclear power reactors can use the same method as a 1800's steam engine.
Amusing more that HydroElectric Dams can use the same method as a 200 B.C.E. Water Wheel.
I8-D
And create a moving magnetic field over coils wound around the medium. Instant power.
Okay, so the millions don't have much to worry about. It was the billionaires that I was really concerned about.
Through what other means (the artificial scarcity of energy has worked really well for a long time) can the planet's billionaires maintain the L-curve distribution of income in the economy? This is the only question which must be answered before revolutionary energy technology can be allowed into the market.
As I've said before, remember that JP Morgan only financed Nikola Tesla's research until he realized that Tesla wanted to give electricity away to everyone for free.
Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly.
www.teslabox.com
Since when did calling something "amusing" count as criticism?
WOOOOOOOSH
Yes, you're right, sometimes the steam lines leak.
Why? You just eat it and let your autonomic nervous system handle the rest.
Let's build more nukes!
Free Manning, jail Obama.
Right here on slashdot even
"Breakthrough." Slashdot submitters/editors keep using that word. I don't think it means what they think it means.
The average energy payback time for silicon is 1-3 years. For thin film, it's a couple months.
Try again.
not by the time it reaches joe sixpack hobbyist.. i would have done a conversion years ago if i could.. sadly my house is situated in about the worst way for it.
If i ever build my retirement house it will be self sufficient. a mix of solar and water power
'...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
Is this before or after the taxpayer subsidy that many places hand you?
It is even more monumental when you consider that solar development, compared to nearly every other energy solution, has been operating on a shoe string budget (no massive injection of government resources to develop it). The opposite makes nuclear energy that much less impressive (i.e. nuclear power is only "cheap" because governments have thrown hundreds and hundreds of billions dollars at it for 70 years).
The Admin and the Engineer
There are many ways to apparently inefficiently directly generate electricity that have nothing to do with boiling water...
You can run turbines in several ways w/o boiling water (e.g., wind, water).
You can generate electricity w/o turbines through chemistry (e.g., lemon battery) or quantum mechanically (e.g., photoelectric effect in solar).
You never know, this whole thing may turn out to be more like the Casmir effect or similar effect. Interesting, but not quite practical for anything yet. The danger is that this gets morphed into something like the sub-zero ground state and hydrino energy peddlers out there...
FWIW, this "magnetic" effect is not something new or unheard of, and it also not just something "magnetic" as it is also present in the "electrical" version. The primary difference is that in the photo-cell, the first order effect of optical excitation is that an electron absorbs a photon changes energy state (the photo-electric effect), since there aren't any magnetic mono-poles (that we know of), there isn't an analgous photo-magnetic effect. There is, however, in both magnetic and electric a second order effect optical rectification of the wave due to the non-linear properties of the medium (e.g., crystal structure, resonnances, or other non-homogenous properties). Almost nobody cares about this second order effect in photo-electric systems (except when it opposes the charge transport and reduces the photo-electric efficiency). Since there isn't a first-order effect of optical excitation in the magnetic version, we only get the second order effect. When people measure a second order effect, they get excited, but that doesn't mean it will turn out to be very practical...
By the xkcd translator it should be 25+ years. That if you assume that the limit on how focused the sunlight can be does not prove it to be impossible. Sadly Randall did not include the time it takes for an impossible technology to reach market.
Rethinking email
Pixie dust and fairy tales?
If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
Imagine for a moment that warp-drive was invented, and it was all powered by a steam engine inside a spaceship! **head asplodes**
Life is not for the lazy.
I keep trying to go off of steam, but those $10 deals keep suckering me back in.
zosxavius photography
* Look at the housing market. How do we determine the value of a house? Look at who wants it, how much they are willing to pay. Those are the only two variables that matter.
Very few people pay cash for a house. The variable that matters more than any other is how much a "home buyer" can afford to borrow (from JP Morgan).
If electricity were free, then people would have more money to spend on ... *finite resources.* Consequently, the price of those resources would increase
If electricity were free, all resources would be essentially limitless. We could afford to desalinate water and pump it into the desert to make an artificial oasis, etc. Surplus has been a 'problem' for quite a while now (due mechanization & automation reducing the amount of labor required for many of the products humans need)...
Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly.
www.teslabox.com
Boiling water is stone age comparatively - no matter how efficient.
Ummm...with all due respect, so what?
I'm results oriented. If you can as-good-as or better efficiency with stone-age tech, then why not go with what works? If there was a high-tech way to directly generate electric power from a nuclear reactor, but it only worked at, say, 5% efficiency, but you could boil water to generate electricity at 10% efficiency (and I have no idea what realistic numbers are; I'm just making these up) then why on earth would you choose the high-tech method instead (unless the high tech method had the advantage of being less complicated/more reliable/more clean/etc.)? That's just asinine.
MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
Is that including the subsidies and tax credits you get for buying solar? Last I checked, where I live, they amount to rather more than I paid in income taxes this past year.
"I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
I hope your shades are very thick since this technology currently requires some fairly bright light.
Well, since I expected zero, this still isn't very much.
Have gnu, will travel.
Gosh, think what life would be like if our ancestors took this attitude. "Yeah, they've been saying how this iron stuff is going to take over from bronze for centuries now, but every time somebody scrapes together enough iron to cast a sword, when they take the mold apart it comes out brittle as pottery."
Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
Just going out on a limb here, but I don't suppose they use distilled water for the steam, do they?
What about dissolved minerals? Don't they gum up the works after a while?
And oxidation?
I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
They're trying to introduce a carbon tax here in AU which should make energy production with a high CO2 impact more expensive. Despite the fact that opposition to it is very loud and stupid, it seems like it might actually happen. I think the biggest problem with it is due to the various Free Trade Agreements, overseas products are implicitly subsidised because they don't have to pay the tax on the energy used to create them and we aren't allowed to tax them.
I think people are missing the point, here. This sounds like a fundamentally new effect. This isn't a better semiconductor, and it's not just focusing light and collecting heat. And they said they could use glass for the material.
So it's a new physical effect, using a cheap material. That sounds significant to me. If nothing else, it sounds like a natural for cogeneration with a heat collecting method.
If all the factories are shut down, how will you make panels?
Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
That's excluding subsidies an tax credits. However, the electricity prices keep hovering around the breakeven point so the case is not as clear as I said it was.
0x or or snor perron?!
10 Years, 10 Years, I Love You, 10 years. Your always 10 years away.
*Sung to the tune of Tomorrow.
I'll have to work on a whole song for that...I wonder if theres an App for that.
Before.
No, wait, after.
Wait...how does that affect energy payback?
a,e,i,o,u and sometimes w and y (at be if of up cwm by)
Stirling cycle, among others. Thermochemical hydrogen + industrial sized fuel cells would give energy storage flexibility, and the possibility of creating a viable fossil fuel replacement (note: I think hydrogen in vehicles sucks donkey balls) via ammonia generation (easy to store, technology similar to LPG conversions for consumer vehicles would suffice, though I admit I haven't done the math), or hydrogenating and cracking biomass derivatives for higher energy value.
I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.