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PETE: The Future of Solar Power

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G_j Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-10 09:54 AM
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PETE: The Future of Solar Power
http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/solar-power/news-photon-enhanced-thermionic-emission-new-take-solar-efficiency

PETE: The Future of Solar Power

Written by davidkonline

<snip>

Two things have to happen before solar is truly economically viable: costs must come down quite a bit, and the efficiency has to at least be within spitting distance of petroleum and other traditional natural resources

<snip>

The basic concept behind this process announced by Stanford University engineers is to coat a piece of semiconducting material with a thin layer of caesium making the material capable of using both light and heat to generate electricity. This is a substantial upgrade over photovoltaic technology - the current standard for solar panels - because while photovoltaics become less efficient as they heat up, the PETE process operates best at high temperature. How high? PETE's peak efficiency doesn't hit until it reaches over 392 degrees Fahrenheit (200 degrees Celsius). With that in mind, PETE is most efficiently deployed in solar concentrators, such as parabolic dishes, in large-scale installations.

The upside is a solar energy process that could make power production twice as efficient as current solar technology and it might even compete with petroleum on a cost basis.

Nick Melosh, assistant professor of materials science and engineering, and leader of the Stanford research group says: "This is really a conceptual breakthrough, a new energy conversion process, not just a new material or a slightly different tweak. It is actually something fundamentally different about how you can harvest energy.”

<snip>

One more advantage of the PETE process is the materials going in are inexpensive and readily available, meeting criteria number one - lower cost - of the solar energy mantra.
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annm4peace Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-10 10:40 AM
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1. Soo...
would it still be ok to get solar panels for water heating for our homes. Right now there is a great subsidy program going on ?
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alfredo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-10 10:52 AM
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2. If it pays for itself, why not?
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G_j Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-10 02:36 PM
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3. I'd like to see, starting w/ poor neighborhoods.
house by house conversion.
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