Lol no worries everybody. I think all the economic turmoil has just got everyone in the country stressed out and edgy. Hell of a decade we've been thru.
Does anyone know who is suppling the batts? The solar tech is an interesting idea too. You could really disconnect. I always wonder how friendly employers will be to charging @ work. If its $3/day/car, & 500 cars in the lot is doing it, I could see some employers getting pissy about it. Low range elecs really have a hurdle if you only have the night to charge.
On the subject of solar panels, there is so much headroom that is waiting too, with panels being between 10 - 15 % efficient. There is roughly ~1300watts per square meter on the surface of earth, so you do the math on what could be done with 100% efficiency. A couple years ago I read an article that a team of scientists have figured out how to mimic photosynthesis (99.8% efficient). So if the same process is applied to an electrical solar panel, well, wouldn't that be just grand.
zpb, I thought that 10-15% was entry level on panels? hasn't somebody achieved 40%+ recently?
Agree though, if 60-70% efficiency can be cost effectively achieved, the world's going solar
zpb, I thought that 10-15% was entry level on panels? hasn't somebody achieved 40%+ recently?
Agree though, if 60-70% efficiency can be cost effectively achieved, the world's going solar
It can easily be solved if every roof top were built with solar cells, a few battery packs in the basement or a shed, a few of other free energy goodies, but they (Money hungry, greedy bastards) wouldn't be happy with empty pockets. No need for power making companies and no need to have gas runing bellow a few cities.
zpb, I thought that 10-15% was entry level on panels? hasn't somebody achieved 40%+ recently?
Agree though, if 60-70% efficiency can be cost effectively achieved, the world's going solar
Actually I think 20% is the newer typical efficiency, true, BUT, they need to be a low cost/Kw output, that is why panels efficiency vary so much, because in the end, a low output low cost panel is just as cost effective as a higher output higher cost panel. There is obviously a limit on the low end, as you run into area constraints, and would end up being MORE expensive.
Agreed as well, we need about 60-70% efficiency like you said to really get things moving with solar, and to meat energy use.
“The modern astrophysical concept that ascribes the sun’s energy to thermonuclear reactions deep in the solar interior is contradicted by nearly every observable aspect of the sun.” —Ralph E. Juergens
According to the info here, 277.8w per square foot of energy is produced by the sun on a sunny day. If we can get even 50% efficiency, it wouldn't take a lot of square footage to get 1000w. Not a lot to be sure, but it's "free".
Huh? That is over 3 Kw/m2.. I have never seen that number been thrown around. Perhaps they are using the 'top of the atmosphere' radiation level, which of course, is alot higher? Even then, that is way too high.
I too have seen higher numbers thrown around, and I am unsure of what is the true number, the most common estimate is roughly 1.3 - 1.5Kw/m2. We should get to the bottom of this, as it's kind of important to know...
“The modern astrophysical concept that ascribes the sun’s energy to thermonuclear reactions deep in the solar interior is contradicted by nearly every observable aspect of the sun.” —Ralph E. Juergens
I imagine some of those numbers are simply being calculated for the theoretical power output of the sun, then divided the surface area of a sphere of a radius the distance of a planet's orbit from the sun, then multiplied by the surface area of the planet itself.
What is not specified is the type of radiation they are counting. Even from an Infrared to Ultra Violet range, I'm sure there are only discrete wavelengths that can be captured by solar panel tech. Even in the chlorophyll comparison, chlorophyll only captures a limited range of EM radiation (ie in the red and blue range) but everything else is missed. I wonder what the actual power availability is.
Yeah, panels vary in the light absorption effectiveness and spectrum effectiveness, two different but equally important aspects. Chlorophyll is not the only pigment in plant photosynthesis though, there are others as well, which have different absorption curves of light than Chlorophyll.
“The modern astrophysical concept that ascribes the sun’s energy to thermonuclear reactions deep in the solar interior is contradicted by nearly every observable aspect of the sun.” —Ralph E. Juergens
“The modern astrophysical concept that ascribes the sun’s energy to thermonuclear reactions deep in the solar interior is contradicted by nearly every observable aspect of the sun.” —Ralph E. Juergens