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Dyed Solar Cells May Offer Unique Installation Opportunities

February 4, 2008   |   8 Comments

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A glass facade made of this material can be given any sort of decorative or promotional design, such as a colorful company logo or graphic, while delivering electricity to boot.
8 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 8
February 6, 2008
<p>This is a great idea as an advertising gimmic, but unlikely to provide very much electricity. At 4% efficiency,&nbsp;the theoretical maximum you can get is&nbsp;40 watts per square meter even in full sun. Suppose you lose 25% as a result of vertical orientation, and lose 10% of that as a result of the panel not facing exactly south, then you are down to a peak power equivalent of 27 watts. Allowing 1100 full load hours (typical for the UK), that's roughly 30 kWh per year per square meter. Allow for batterie or invertor losses, and you are looking at 20 to 25kWh per year doing something useful. There's also the embedded energy of the product - an extra pane of glass, and a heating process to 600C, and payback time will be a consideration. Also, it is far more likely that such a glass unit will be replaced than a standard unit, as companies frequently change name, or relocate their premises.</p>
Comment
2 of 8
February 6, 2008
Nifty Technology, but it's value proposition will only be as valuable as the Marketing Department allocates it.&nbsp;At best, the straight $/kW-h value to the system would be break even compared to traditional retail energy costs over the lifetime of the system, probably worse depending on lifetime degredation and actual cost of material and installation. There's a reason traditional PV cells are blue and black....all the other light gets turned into energy...darker colored light contains less energy and is reflected...making the cells appear&nbsp;the darker colors.&nbsp; The light colored cells means the high energy light is then reflected and wasted, making for a far less efficient transformation.
Comment
3 of 8
February 6, 2008
<p>If this panel is installed in a south facing &quot;picture&quot; window of 4' x 5',&nbsp; how much electricity can it produce equating the electricity generated to an appliance such as a water heater, refrigerator, and most of all in Texas an air conditioner?&nbsp; How much do the inventors anticipate a 4' x 5' glass costing the consumer?</p>
Comment
4 of 8
February 6, 2008
it will finaly boost solar into possible profit .even with only a small power production. so can the message be changed at will for more up to date advertiseing?
Comment
5 of 8
February 7, 2008
Great for the likes of Ford, or Pepsi cola. but; try and change the advertisement when they move out of the building and (OUCH) the cost.....But Great for artists who want working art that can provide a service.
Comment
6 of 8
February 9, 2008
Sounds great for billboards, for lighting them. Since advertising is more about impressions than substance, the actual&nbsp; cost effectiveness and EROI - with turnover for such use - may not be an issue. Or short lifespan versions might get developed. However, commercial success could see revenue flow to further R&amp;D, leading to lower cost solar cells, that can make a real impact on essential energy production.
Comment
7 of 8
February 9, 2008
<p>This is very good for advertising and if we include&nbsp;TV screens, the advertising change constantment and the electricity generated from the system can pay the electricity used for the TV screen.</p><p>negrininvest@yahoo.com</p>
Comment
8 of 8
February 10, 2008
How about to use this for powering small devices installed remote areas. Costs for feeding electricity with ordinal ways in remote areas may be very high. If this dye system is
cheap enough to do it, then it would be a good candidate to do it.
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