-
What makes IBM's 'green' data center tick
CNET News' Martin LaMonica gets a tour of IBM's lab for green IT where the data center uses networked sensors and liquid cooling to ...
-
Tesla Test Drive: Time to Try an American Car?
MoneyWatch picked six American cars to check out now. The sleekest of the bunch is the new Tesla Roadster, which does zero to 60 ...
-
The new eco-friendly Samsung Reclaim
Natali Del Conte shows us the new eco-friendly Samsung Reclaim from the product launch in New York.
-
How does a solar cell work?
How does solar conversion work now and how do we want it to work in the future? Paul Altivisatos, interim director for Lawrence Berkeley ...
-
What drives solar stocks?
At the Intersolar Conference at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, Vishal Shah, solar equities research analyst at Barclays Capital, predicted that the U.S. ...
-
Opportunities for investing in solar technology
At the Intersolar Conference in San Francisco, Scott Stephens, Photovoltaic Specialist for the U.S. Department of Energy, explains why he's optimistic about the future. ...
-
Capital flowing into green
At Greentech Media's Green Building Summit in Menlo Park, Calif., Cascadia Capital CEO Michael Butler discusses three subsectors of the green-building industry that recently ...
-
Who will manage the smart grid?
At Greentech Media's Green Building Summit at SRI International in Menlo Park, Calif., tech executives discuss the future management of smart-grid technology and whether ...
-
Speeding up construction on ‘green’ homes
At Greentech Medias Green Building Summit at SRI International in Menlo Park, Calif., Serious Material Chairman Marc Porat discusses the challenges associated with building ...
-
Tech execs talk smart design for ‘green’ buildings
At Greentech Medias Green Building Summit at SRI International, in Menlo Park, Calif., tech executives discuss what is needed to construct and design "green" ...
-
Tomorrow's smart grid
At the Churchill Club's 11th Annual Top Ten Tech Trends, venture capitalists discuss whether the smart grid and smart meter trends will continue to ...
-
The future of clean-tech investing
At the Greentech Media and Groom Energy, Enterprise Carbon Accounting Summit in Burlingame, Calif., venture capitalists discuss the outlook of investing in smart grids, ...
-
Counting carbon to find bottom-line benefits
What could your business do better? At the Greentech Media and Groom Energy, Enterprise Carbon Accounting Summit in Burlingame, Calif., panelists explain what "The ...
-
E-motorcycle hits S.F. streets
CNET News reporter Mats Lewan takes the brand new Zero S electric motorcycle for a test drive in downtown San Francisco. Currently, electric scooter-style ...
-
'60 Minutes': Powered by coal
Coal is America's most abundant and cheapest fossil fuel but, as Scott Pelley reports, burning it happens to be the biggest contributor to global ...
-
The Green Enterprise: HP
Hewlett-Packard plans to cut its global energy use 20 percent by 2010. Correspondent Sumi Das looks at "green" strategies the company is implementing to ...
-
Revving up the electric-car industry
At the Green:Net conference in San Francisco, John Clark of GridPoint and Richard Lowenthal of Coulomb Technologies discuss how the largest obstacle for next-generation ...
-
Getting green consumers to take action
At the Green: Net '09 conference in San Francisco, Erin Carlson, director of Yahoo for Good, breaks down the demographics of green-minded consumers who ...
-
What is the smart grid?
At the Green: Net '09 Conference in San Francisco, Jesse Berst, managing director of Global Smart Energy, breaks the smart grid down into three ...
-
From Internet to enternet, creating the energy network
At the Green: Net '09 Conference in San Francisco, Bob Metcalfe, a general partner at Polaris Venture Partners, explained how Washington actually helped the ...
- Talkback
- Most Recent of 5 Talkback(s)
- Thread View
- Flat View
- Why don't we just...
- Why don't we just place a solar panels on all building throught out the US?
the combined roof area would be sufficient to produce all the power we need and dump it in the main grid.
if everybody pich in this would be more then enough...
... (Read the rest) - Posted by: vbp1 Posted on: 08/14/09 (Edited: 08/14/09 @ 03:08) You are currently: a Guest | Log in | Terms of Use
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
What do you think?
Video Channels
Premier Vendor Content Whitepapers, webcasts & resources from our Power Center Sponsors
- The best support in the Linux business
-
If Linux is going to power your mission-critical applications, you'd better have the best support known to business. Novell was rated the top provider of Linux technical support.
- Learn more >>
- The more you simplify, the more you save
-
When you transition from your existing Red Hat environment to SUSE Linux Enterprise from Novell, you can recognize dramatic cost savings, perhaps as much 50%
- Learn more >>
- New Online Dashboard for IT Leaders
-
Read about top issues IT decision-makers face every day, plus get cost-effective solutions to real-life IT problems.
- Learn more >>
- Keep Up With The Latest In Document Management with The DocuMentor.
-
Doc delivers the scoop on today's enterprise content management, printer maintenance, and all other issues related to document management. It's the DocuMentor Blog.
- Learn more >>
How does a solar cell work?
How does solar conversion work now and how do we want it to work in the future? Paul Altivisatos, interim director for Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory at UC Berkeley, explains how a solar cell works and how the solar energy of the future, via a solar fuel generator that converts energy the same way plants do, can become more efficient. He says that rather than looking for what's next, he looks to the end result--an ideal usage for materials.
Sound effect
>>
Speaker: How do we look, not from an economic perspective or a market perspective, but just from the point of view of the fundamental physics of how devices operate? How has solar technology evolved? And so in that context we would say the simplest thing that we can have is a device which takes the energy of the sunlight and converts it to heat. And remember that the sunlight consists of these quantum particles thought have a couple of electron volts energy each, and those impinging on a surface. And when it becomes hot, we're -- we've thermalized those photons down to a few -- maybe, 20 millivolts or so. So the next type of device is the one which is based on the basic photoelectric effect discovered by Einstein, and which involves promoting an electron across the band gap of a semiconductor material so that if the photon's bigger than the band gap, electron gets excited and now thermalizes again, but only down to the band gap, but not any further. So we get to keep one whole electron volt, roughly, of energy in that. And in that context, when classified in that way, we'd consider crystalline and thin-film to belong to the same family. Of course, there are multi-gap cells where we separately collect the red, green, and blue photons. And today what a lot of scientists are working one ins what is thermodynamically still further, more advanced technology, which is to make solar fuel, that would be to copy what is done by plants, which take CO2 and water, and then use the energy of photons to make new molecules, to make fuel molecules. If we could make a solar fuel generator with reasonable efficiency, that would thermodynamically be uphill quite a ways because now instead of just capturing the energy of the sun in terms of storing it in the carriers, which we could make electricity from, we would be using that energy to rearrange the atoms within molecules to create a more complex matter. So we'd be going entropically uphill. And so from a long-term perspective of what is thermodynamically the most advanced version of solar energy that would be a higher order version of things, which we would certainly like to get to. And we're also very interested, of course, in thinking about the problem from a top down perspective. In other words, not necessarily looking at where is the PV industry today, but looking a little bit -- as much as we can -- at the problem from the opposite end and saying, "Where would we like it to be at the end?" So if we look at -- let's say this plot shows the total power consumption of the United States, which is around 3.2, 3.3 terrawatts. So it's a large number. Remember global PV production might be seven or eight gigawatts in a good year. If we're at 3.3 terrawatts, that's pretty far off, is where we'd like to end up perhaps some day. So this plot just says, let's take a certain area of the United States and -- as the previous speaker said, we're fortunate in the US to have a lot of land, and so it's possible to imagine doing something like this. It wouldn't happen every place in the world, but here it might be. But let's take a number of 60 million acres. That's about a quarter of the agricultural land, and we imagine converting the energy of the incident photons to a usable form at different power efficiencies shown up there, one, three, and ten percent. And what you can see is that one percent power efficiency, that's a very, very low power efficiency, but if we had that amount of area, 60 million acres that would be equal to US gasoline consumption. And at -- thank you. Pointer, thank you very much. And at three -- six or seven percent, it's really equal to total US energy use. Just to calibrate, a hundred million acres is a quarter -- is .4 million square kilometers. And California is about 400,000 acres, roughly.
Sound effect
==== Transcribed by Automatic Sync Technologies ====

























