Showing posts with label edge lit panels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label edge lit panels. Show all posts

Monday, July 14, 2008

MIT opens new 'window' on solar energy

Cost effective devices expected on market soon

Elizabeth A. Thomson, News Office
July 10, 2008

Imagine windows that not only provide a clear view and illuminate rooms, but also use sunlight to efficiently help power the building they are part of. MIT engineers report a new approach to harnessing the sun's energy that could allow just that.

The work, to be reported in the July 11 issue of Science, involves the creation of a novel "solar concentrator." "Light is collected over a large area [like a window] and gathered, or concentrated, at the edges," explains Marc A. Baldo, leader of the work and the Esther and Harold E. Edgerton Career Development Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering.

As a result, rather than covering a roof with expensive solar cells (the semiconductor devices that transform sunlight into electricity), the cells only need to be around the edges of a flat glass panel. In addition, the focused light increases the electrical power obtained from each solar cell "by a factor of over 40," Baldo says.

Because the system is simple to manufacture, the team believes that it could be implemented within three years--even added onto existing solar-panel systems to increase their efficiency by 50 percent for minimal additional cost. That, in turn, would substantially reduce the cost of solar electricity.

In addition to Baldo, the researchers involved are Michael Currie, Jon Mapel, and Timothy Heidel, all graduate students in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and Shalom Goffri, a postdoctoral associate in MIT's Research Laboratory of Electronics.

"Professor Baldo's project utilizes innovative design to achieve superior solar conversion without optical tracking," says Dr. Aravinda Kini, program manager in the Office of Basic Energy Sciences in the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science, a sponsor of the work. "This accomplishment demonstrates the critical importance of innovative basic research in bringing about revolutionary advances in solar energy utilization in a cost-effective manner."

Solar concentrators in use today "track the sun to generate high optical intensities, often by using large mobile mirrors that are expensive to deploy and maintain," Baldo and colleagues write in Science. Further, "solar cells at the focal point of the mirrors must be cooled, and the entire assembly wastes space around the perimeter to avoid shadowing neighboring concentrators."

The MIT solar concentrator involves a mixture of two or more dyes that is essentially painted onto a pane of glass or plastic. The dyes work together to absorb light across a range of wavelengths, which is then re-emitted at a different wavelength and transported across the pane to waiting solar cells at the edges.

In the 1970s, similar solar concentrators were developed by impregnating dyes in plastic. But the idea was abandoned because, among other things, not enough of the collected light could reach the edges of the concentrator. Much of it was lost en route.

The MIT engineers, experts in optical techniques developed for lasers and organic light-emitting diodes, realized that perhaps those same advances could be applied to solar concentrators. The result? A mixture of dyes in specific ratios, applied only to the surface of the glass, that allows some level of control over light absorption and emission. "We made it so the light can travel a much longer distance," Mapel says. "We were able to substantially reduce light transport losses, resulting in a tenfold increase in the amount of power converted by the solar cells."

This work was also supported by the National Science Foundation. Baldo is also affiliated with MIT's Research Laboratory of Electronics, Microsystems Technology Laboratories, and Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies.

Mapel, Currie and Goffri are starting a company, Covalent Solar, to develop and commercialize the new technology. Earlier this year Covalent Solar won two prizes in the MIT $100K Entrepreneurship Competition. The company placed first in the Energy category ($20,000) and won the Audience Judging Award ($10,000), voted on by all who attended the awards.

Video


Click To Play. Marc Baldo discusses MIT's solar concentrator

Images

artist's rendition of solar concentrator process

Image courtesy / Nicolle Rager Fuller, NSF
An artist's representation shows how a cost effective solar concentrator could help make existing solar panels more efficient. Enlarge image

solar concentrators
Photo / Donna Coveney
Organic solar concentrators collect and focus different colors of sunlight. Solar cells can be attached to the edges of the plates. By collecting light over their full surface and concentrating it at their edges, these devices reduce the required area of solar cells and consequently, the cost of solar power. Stacking multiple concentrators allows the optimization of solar cells at each wavelength, increasing the overall power output. Enlarge image

Marc Baldo, Shalom Goffri
Photo / Donna Coveney
Marc Baldo, associate professor of electrical engineering and computer science (left) and Shalom Goffri, postdoc in MIT's Research Laboratory of Electronics (right) hold examples of organic solar concentrators. Enlarge image

Teresa Herbert
MIT News Office
Phone: 617-258-5403
E-mail: therbert@mit.edu

Source

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Copper Nanoparticle Inks and Applied Nanotech

As to copper inks (which I understand will be Applied Nanotech's future, making and salvation) I can find nothing in the literature about it, the Japanese partner or what is so valuable.

I did find this:
Nanosolar:
What is claimed is:
1. A method for fabricating coated nanoparticles, comprising the steps of: obtaining core nanoparticles containing one or more elements from group IB and/or IIIA and/or VIA and coating the core nanoparticles with one or more layers of metal from group IB, IIIA or an element from group VIA in a controlled fashion such that the resulting coated nanoparticles have a desired stoichiometric ratio of elements, wherein the core nanoparticles contain copper.
Source

And this - the Holy Grail - printing ICs:
The holy grail is a copper based ink, which has been available for some time, but not used because in the cure process the copper oxide layer that forms on the surface is not conductive. This then makes it difficult to achieve a good connection with the other components, and it is so unreliable that silver had been preferred as overall it offers better yield and reliability due to the interconnections involved.
Source

The cure processes:
1)
However, the Novacentrix PulseForge cures the copper ink so quickly that it does not have time for an oxide layer to form.
http://www.novacentrix.com/products/photonic.php

2)
M3D - Optomec another APNT cohort using a laser to sinter the copper:
Maskless Mesoscale Material Deposition (M3D) System
http://www.novacentrix.com/images/Characterization%20of%20Soft%20Magnetic%20Nano-Material%20Deposited%20with%20M3D%20Technology%20-%20ppt.pdf

And Cima NanoTech:
Technology Pioneer 2008 - Jon Brodd (Cima Nanotech)

YouTube Video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rqnf9foDdi0

Interesting!

A competitor?

Ref:
Nano Materials in Printed Electronics: Bill Faulkner1; 1Cima Nanotech
The Global Electronics Industry is seeking next generation manufacturing methods to produce cheaper, smaller, and more flexible components. Industry leaders are ramping up significant development projects to eliminate the high capital costs, expensive processing, and environmentally damaging lithographic etching of electronics. Functionalized nano-materials are emerging a key component to meeting these goals. Printing technologies such as ink jet, gravure, flexo, and other graphic arts based systems are being optimized to achieve the higher resolution and operational demands of electronics. In many cases, the unique properties of nano materials are the necessary components in inks and coatings for these systems. The multi-billion dollar market opportunity includes components for flat panel displays, EMI shielding films, solar cells, printed thin film transistors, and RFID tags.Cima NanoTech is manufacturing & commercializing nano metal-based coatings and inks that enable self-assembling random patterns and direct printing of electronic circuits and films. The venture capital backed company is headquartered in St. Paul, Minnesota with R&D facilities in Caesarea, Israel, and toll manufacturing in Japan.
http://www.tms.org/Meetings/Specialty/nano06/PrelimTechProg.pdf

Cima NanoTech:
http://www.cimananotech.com/


NovaReady:
APNT is a customer of theirs for copper nanoparticles.

Japanese chemical cohort:
Unknown name.

All very interesting and VERY frustrating cause I have no idea whatsoever where APNT fits in and what they bring to the table.