Showing posts with label Building Integrated Photovoltaics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Building Integrated Photovoltaics. Show all posts

Sunday, March 27, 2022

10 Solar Power Technology Innovations

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In this post I will list 10 solar power technology innovations.

1. Building Integrated Photovoltaics

Building Integrated Photovoltaics (BIPV) system is the integration of photovoltaics (PV) into the building envelope and part of building components such as roofs, skylights, façades, or windows

The photovoltaic materials are used to replace conventional building materials and convert solar energy into electricity for on-site use or export to the grid. They also have some other functions such as thermal insulation, weather protection (waterproofing, sun protection), noise protection, etc.

BIPV systems are increasingly being incorporated into the construction of new buildings because they have lower overall costs than non-integrated PV systems. BIPV systems avoid the cost of conventional materials so the cost of PV materials is reduced and their life-cycle cost is improved.

:: Solar Windows

Solar windows are a form of Building Integrated Photovoltaics (BIPV). They are windows with built-in solar cells.

Solar windows feature photovoltaic glazing and not only provide a clear view, but also convert sunlight into renewable electricity for the building. Efficiency levels are between 12% and 15%. 

It is also possible to retrofit existing windows by buying a photovoltaic film and applying it to window glass. The film is made from mostly organic materials, such as carbon, nitrogen, hydrogen, and oxygen.

Transparent solar panels are another innovation in the solar technology.

Read about companies that are producing solar energy generating windows: pv-magazine-usa.com/2021/06/22/more-than-a-view-here-are-3-solar-energy-producing-windows/

:: Solar shingles

Another type of Building Integrated Photovoltaics is solar shingles. The solar shingle idea came from DOW Chemical Company, who first unveiled it in 2009.  In October 2016, the company Tesla entered the solar shingle industry in a joint venture with SolarCity. In 2017, Tesla began marketing their solar shingles (Solar Roof tiles).

Solar shingles are solar roofing products that function as mini solar panels and are designed to look like conventional roofing materials. They resemble the size and shape of regular asphalt shingles or roof tiles and blend aesthetically with the roof unlike the bulky solar panels mounted on the roof. 

An integrated, single-piece solar rooftop made using laminated glass is another innovative product that some companies offer.

2. Solar Paint

Solar paint is an innovation in solar energy technology that promises a much cheaper and easier way to use solar energy.

There are a few different types of solar paints that are in development now, and each has its own unique way of producing energy. Most solar paint prototypes contain liquids with photovoltaic properties so that they can capture the sunlight and transform it into electricity.

Currently, the tree solar paints type that has the most potential are:

  • Quantum Dot Solar Cells (Photovoltaic Paint)
  • Perovskite Solar Paint
  • Hydrogen-Producing Solar Paint

A disadvantage of solar paint is its efficiency (3 to 8%), new efficiency record of 13.4% for a quantum dot solar cell is still much behind that of silicon-based solar panels (20 to 25%).

Solar paints are not yet available to consumers, but with further research they may be on the market soon.

3. Solar Gadgets: Portable Solar Battery Charger & Portable Solar Lighting Kit

A portable solar charger and portable solar lighting kit are useful solar gadgets. With a portable solar battery charger you can charge your cell phone, laptop, tablet, iPods, digital cameras, etc., everywhere you want.

A portable solar lighting kit is helpful as an emergency light whenever required. It is also useful as portable light for campers and hitchhikers. Typically, such a kit provides power output in 3 – 10 W and has a rechargeable battery. Read more: economictimes.indiatimes.com/small-biz/productline/power-generation/solar-lighting-kit-extremely-useful-as-emergency-lights-or-portable-lights/articleshow/69198210.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst

Portable solar power helps people in developing countries who lack access to electricity and those who survived disasters.

4. Solar Transportation

An example of solar transportation is a solar-powered car. In one of my previous posts “5 Partially Solar-Powered Cars You Can Buy”  you can read some interesting information regarding solar cars. There are also solar trainssolar planes, solar yachts, solar bikes, solar scooters, etc.

5. Solar Desalination

Solar desalination is an environment-friendly technique to produce drinking water from the sea using solar energy. There are two common methods – direct (thermal) and indirect (photovoltaic).

The salt from the water is removed via a specially designed still that uses solar energy. The produced heat boils seawater and captures the water vapor, which, is in turn, cooled and condensed into fresh water.

Another solar desalination method is reverse osmosis. It is a pressure-driven process that separates fresh water from other substances via a semi-permeable membrane. It is used in large solar-powered plants. 

Solar desalination could be helpful for millions of people around the world who do not have access to fresh drinking water (coastal community, low-income people, people in developing countries, survivors of various disasters). 

Saudi Arabia meets much of its drinking water needs by desalinationYears ago, the country started to use the power of the sun to produce fresh water. 

Solar-powered desalination plants could supply water in remote desert areas where fresh water isn’t available. 

6. Bifacial Solar Panels

Bifacial solar panels produce electricity from both sides of the panels – front and backside, as they can collect sunlight reflecting from the ground. Thus bifacial solar modules perform best when mounted near reflective surfaces. For example, light-colored roofs, white tiles, swimming pools, desert sand, and much more. Bifacial solar panels are also perfect for homes with limited space due to their ability to generate more power.

Bifacial solar panels aren’t something new. Bifacial solar technology  is dating back to the 1960s and 1970s. but only with the development of Passivated Emitter Rear Cell technology their popularity had increased because it helped increase their efficiency rate (between 20% to 40%).

Currently, the market is dominated by mono facial (traditional) solar modules. Predictions are that by 2029, bifacial solar modules will make up 50% of the market share. Source: solartechadvisor.com/bifacial-solar-panels/

7. Perovskite Solar Cells

Perovskite solar cells are a group of materials with a specific crystal structure, named after the mineral with that structure – calcium titanium oxide (CaTiO3). Any type of material that has the same crystal structure as calcium titanium oxide is considered a perovskite. And this is a group of 10 or more metallic elements that exhibit photovoltaic (PV) properties.

There is an increasing interest in perovskite solar cells because, unlike silicon solar cells, they can be mass-produced through roll-to-roll processing. In addition, they are light, colorful, and can be used in non-traditional settings such as windows and contoured roofs. 

Perovskite solar cells are an interesting area of research among some other new-generation solar power technologies due to their conversion efficiency. In recent years, they have shown a rapid increase in conversion efficiency from below 4% to over 25% today.

Perovskite solar cells are considered the future of solar cells since their specific crystal structure has shown a great potential for high conversion rate and low production costs.

The most recent innovation is pairing two different PV films together  to improve module conversion (tandem solar cells). Placing perovskite solar cells on top of existing silicon PV cells increases light absorption efficiency. These tandem solar cells can capture both short- and long-wavelength light and increase conversion efficiency to almost 44% compared to silicon-only PV cells, whose theoretical efficiency limit is only 30%.  Source: www.hanwha.com/en/news_and_media/stories/sustainability/plugging-into-the-sun-how-hanwha-is-leading-with-innovations-in-solar-energy.html

8. Solar Panels and Agriculture – Agrivoltaics

In recent years, a new technique regarding solar panel installation emerged – installing solar panels on farmlands to produce clean electricity from the sun to help farmers minimize their utility costsFarmers can also sell excess clean electricity to the grid and develop a form of passive income. At the same time, a huge array of crops are growing underneath the solar panels – peppers, tomatoes, beans, carrots, kale, garlic, radishes, lettuce, and more.  

Putting solar panels on farmlands and planting crops underneath is a new scientific field known as agrivoltaics – agriculture plus photovoltaics (“agri-“ relating to food production, “-voltaic” relating to electricity production).

We all know that plants need sunlight, but some need less than others. We can shade those crops and that means they will require less water, which rapidly evaporates in an open field. In addition, plants “sweat” through a process called transpiration, which makes the solar panels overhead cooler and boosts their efficiency.

There is no need agrivoltaics to be limited to the kinds of crops people eat. The farmers might let native grasses grow wild under the panels, providing food for livestock like cattle and sheep, which would also benefit from the shade. Source: www.wired.com/story/growing-crops-under-solar-panels-now-theres-a-bright-idea/

9. Floating Solar Power System

A floating solar power system (also called floating solar, floating photovoltaic) is a term that describes solar panels mounted on platforms that float on top of a water body surface, usually reservoirs or lakes. The clean electricity is sent from this floating solar structure via submarine cables to a transmission tower.

Floating solar is a fresh innovation in solar power technology. The first floating solar power system took place in Aichi Prefecture, Japan, in 2007. The construction combined hydro-engineering with solar PV technologies. Since then, this technology has begun to spread around the world. But Japan remains a world leader in floating solar technologies.

The top four global users of floating solar power are  China, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan.

A floating solar system has a more complicated structure than traditional land-based solar installations. Therefore, it is necessary higher initial capital investment. Floating solar is a new option for renewable energy that complements existing technologies.

Although most floating solar systems are built on calm water, such as reservoirs and lakes, there are also sea-based systems. In 2014, Swimsol  launched the world’s first floating solar power plant for the sea (SolarSea) in the clear blue waters of the Maldives. Source: www.energywatch.com.my/blog/2020/10/11/10-illuminating-facts-about-floating-solar-power/

10. Solar Power Stations in Space

Solar power stations in space or the so-called space-based solar power (SBSP), is an innovative and interesting concept. It means capturing solar power in outer space and distributing it to Earth. Read the post “Solar Power Stations in Space – Science Fiction or a Future Reality?”  to learn more about this concept.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Solé Power Tile – Integrated Solar Panel Roofing

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Philadelphia-based company SRS Energy is a leading developer of sustainable solar roofing systems. The Solé Power Tile created by SRS Energy is the first curved building-integrated photovoltaic (BIPV) roofing product, designed in collaboration with US Tile. The eco-friendly blue barrel-style tiles can be seamlessly integrated with US Tile’s traditional clay tiles. 


The product employs thin-film solar technology that incorporates triple-junction amorphous solar cells made by UNI-SOLAR. The tiles are rated at 860 kilowatt hours per square (or per 100 square feet) annually in an area with "5.8 peak sun hours" per day. The Solé tiles are also lightweight, unbreakable and fully-recyclable. Their shape allows air to flow underneath, reducing a building’s cooling needs.

The Solé Power Tile has just passed a key milestone. SRS Energy has obtained an ETL listing report certifying the Solé Power Tile has passed the testing associated with the Underwriters Laboratory (UL) UL 1703 standard. Passing this is the prerequisite for any solar photovoltaics to be approved by the State of California as eligible for CSI rebates from utilities. In June, the factory will be inspected, and then the Solé Power Tile will likely be included on the CEC approved module listing on July 1st.

SRS Energy’s Solé Power Tile system won the Gold prize in the Industrial Design category of the 2010 Edison Best New Product Awards.

More information you can find here.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Power Your Home with Solar Roof Tiles

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Today the main way for homes to harness solar power is still through bulky rigid panels added to the rooftop or mounted on the ground. But inte recent years there are some innovations within the solar PV industry such as solar roof tiles. Solar roof tiles refer to Building Integrated Photovoltaics (BIPV) systems. They blend in better and help deliver clean, green solar power, without the need to sacrifice the aesthetic look and beauty of your home.

Solar roof tiles are made with built-in photovoltaic cells and the color of the solar tiles range from blue to violet to gray and blends well with most colors. Solar roof tiles are connected to each other via MC or other suitable connector type used inphotovoltaics and they work like conventional solar panels. One tile produces about 60 - 180 watts of electricity, and an entire roof could definitely power your entire house. A real hot sunny day could even mean profit for you, excess energy can be sold at a nearby company.

Solar roof tiles are more expensive than solar panels but in terms of the advantages it gives to a local user, it should outweigh the cons. Also, the government offers considerate breaks in taxes for homes that use solar power electricity.

Some of the companies currently producing solar roof tiles are General Electric, PowerLight, Sharp Electronics, and SunPower Corp.

Solé Power Tile, created by SRS Energy, is the industry’s first building-integrated photovoltaic product designed specifically for curved-roof systems and in my next post I'm going to write about it.