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Flexible Nanoantenna Arrays Capture Solar Energy

By Roberta Kwok, Idaho National Laboratory
August 12, 2008   |   16 Comments

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16 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 16
August 12, 2008
This technology is founded on the pioneering patents of Alvin Marks who described it all in patents more than 25 years ago. http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/4445050.html
Too bad our brain dead government did not have the foresight to throw major funding to this former defense department scientist back then. In fact, he developed patents for all the major manufacturing issues of such devices and more. http://www.patentstorm.us/search.html?q=%22alvin+marks%22&s.x=0&s.y=0&s=s
Ironic that Federal national labs now take credit for this work.
Comment
2 of 16
August 12, 2008
While this material is very interesting and possesses an extraordinary efficiency, its use in commercial power generation will probably be limited due to the fact that it appears to absorb only a small part of the spectrum (short of significant advances in photon up- and down-conversion). However, the possibility of a device to convert IR to visible light for the purpose of climate management is certainly intriguing.
Comment
3 of 16
August 13, 2008
Interesting but I wonder how much energy the rectifiers will sap from the 80% efficient reported energy gain. There always seems to be a catch that reduces the obtained energy quite dramatically.
Comment
4 of 16
August 13, 2008
Even if the rectifiers drain 50% of the energy gain this technology will still outclass existing PV technology in both yield and production cost/application.

The applications for a high yield film in the hybrid vehicle industry and domestic homes/commercial buildings alone ,justifies a massive financial injection and focus into getting this product to world markets within the next 4 years or sooner!
Comment
5 of 16
August 13, 2008
The key to all the alternative energy sources is inexpensive transducers that convert whatever form of power into electricity power which is usually the most efficient and flexible power supply for systems. Thermal systems are efficient but the equipment is relatively expensive currently and therfore prohibitive since the infrastructure for designing and manufacturing the equipment is not readily available or accessible.
Comment
6 of 16
August 13, 2008
Most durable plastics are made from petroleum products, yes? What sort of environment impact would large scale manufacturing of this have on resources and the environment?
Comment
7 of 16
August 13, 2008
I'm a little confused by the claim that this process is inexpensive when it involves the use of gold. Is the amount of gold used incredibly small?
Comment
8 of 16
August 13, 2008
As a bridging application until the high speed electronics are perfected is to use this as a solar domestic hot water panel - it's perfect. Thin, inexpensive, efficient. No more glycol, plumbing, overheating etc. Run the power into an electrical heating element in the tank - probably doesn't matter that it's cycling trillions of times per second. This could be the ultimate solar domestic hot water panel.
Comment
9 of 16
August 13, 2008
Jeff Thorn; you may be surprised that solar thermal is far cheaper than fuel burning and electricity for heating at a dollar a watt for water heating collectors. Payback compared to conventional systems is five to ten years, lesser as current energy costs rise.
Tama; we currently BURN petroleum for energy. Would it not make more sense to make a durable product with it.
This nano-antenae tec seems practical since electro-magnetic spectrum energy only needs adaptation to what we deem as wanted to power our stuff. Light and heat spectrums "merely" need rectification and transformation to grid frequencies and powers.
Comment
10 of 16
August 13, 2008
The idea of using this technology for cooling is very intriguing. Here in California, we use about 30% of our electrical energy on cooling on peak summer days. Using these panels on rooftops could dramatically reduce our peak power requirements and load on the grid.
Comment
11 of 16
August 13, 2008
The key thing for me is that there are practical applications right now that don't require the high speed rectifier issue to be resolved. Producing electricity for resistive heating loads which may include domestic hot water or space heating are two examples. Absorbing the infrared energy to aid in cooling - and producing subsequently useful resistive heating elsewhere is another example.
The high speed rectification and power quality issues are not holding back this technology from profitable applications right now.
Comment
12 of 16
August 13, 2008
As I understand it, the reason that rectification is needed is that the high frequency AC from millions of sub-micron antennas is not synchronized. In other words, without rectification, the output on average would be zero as opposing waves cancel each other out (destructive interference).
Comment
13 of 16
August 13, 2008
This sounds too much like a free energy device. You may never see a working model..Ever. Good article though.
Comment
14 of 16
August 13, 2008
I too wondered about the gold. It seems they announce breakthrough after breakthrough in nanotechnology and then you never hear of it being produced at an affordable cost.
Comment
15 of 16
August 14, 2008
Won't this method require ~REALLY FAST~ diodes ???

Checked out patent 4445050... Yep, that sure looks like it alright.

boB
Comment
16 of 16
August 22, 2008
Why bother with the antennas? If you can get diodes with such low forward voltage the thermal motion of the electrons would be sufficient to drive them through these magic one way valves. Maxwell's demons cannot function and never will.

If such a device could work one could use it to transfer energy from one body to another even if both started at the same temperature and were both in an insulated box. This can not happen in our universe.

Perhaps if infrared black body radiation was low entropy coherent radiation like radio or microwave transmissions the system might work. Otherwise, one cannot defy the 2nd law of thermodynamics.
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