Jump to content

Create a Free Account or Sign In to connect and share in green living and alternative energy forum discussions.

The Hybrid Solar Panel and Battery in One


 
4 replies to this topic

#1 E3 wise

E3 wise

    Shifted

  • Premium Shifter
  • 1,027 posts 286 rep

Posted 19 October 2014 - 04:31 PM

Attached File  Hybrid Solar Battery.JPG   31.57K   0 downloads

From E3Wise - Currently evaluation of the Ohio State Hybrid solar panel battery is being conducted at the National Renewable Energy Laboratories (NREL) for the Department of Energy.  The analysis should be completed by early 2015 but currently the system looks very promising and could provide a way to store energy on board the panel, there by reducing or possibly eliminating batteries all together. Think super efficient solar panel meets the air battery.  Since high quality solar batteries are the most expensive component of any solar system this could mean a reduction in costs of over $750 per battery.

As an example our home has a hybrid grid ties system with 12 of these batteries that would cut our cost by over $9500.00 More than 60% of our total cost without adding in the inverter and wiring another $3500.00 Folks that’s just plain huge and would bring solar to the masses faster than any other breakthrough in the last forty years.  Here’s the article.

New Solar Battery Could Generate Cheaper Clean Energy


http://www.livescien...ble-energy.html

A new kind of solar cell could store electrical energy without any help from traditional batteries, according to a new study.

Researchers at Ohio State University, in Columbus, have developed what they're calling the world's first solar battery — a hybrid device that combines the energy-capturing abilities of a solar cell with the energy-storing capabilities of a battery.

The new cell could lower the cost of harvesting renewable energy from the sun by as much as 25 percent, according to the researchers.  The key to the device's success is a mesh solar panel that allows both sunlight and air to enter the cell. This porous material represents a departure from the solid semiconductor materials typically used to make solar cells. Allowing both light and oxygen into the cell enables the chemical reactions that typically occur inside a battery to occur within the solar cell itself.

"The state of the art is to use a solar panel to capture the light, and then use a cheap battery to store the energy," lead researcher Yiying Wu, a professor of chemistry at Ohio State, said in a statement. "We’ve integrated both functions into one device. Any time you can do that, you reduce cost."

But this innovative device can do more than just lower the cost of renewable energy, Wu said. It can also help solve a problem that's been plaguing scientists for years: how to store energy from the sun without losing a lot of that energy in the process.

A loss of electricity naturally occurs within any solar cell when the electrons released by the cell's semiconductor materials travel outside the cell and into a battery. Only about 80 percent of the electrons produced by solar cells successfully complete this journey. But the new solar cell is designed to ensure that 100 percent of the electrons captured find their way into a battery, the researchers said.
This high efficiency is possible because the conversion of sunlight to electric current isn't happening inside the solar cell before being transferred to the battery. Since the battery is located inside the cell, electrons are not able to escape, the researchers said.

The hybrid solar cell-battery is made up of three electrodes, or materials that conduct electricity. The first electrode is the mesh solar panel (which is really a collection of solar cells), the second electrode is made of a thin sheet of porous carbon and the third electrode is a sheet of lithium metal. Between these three electrodes is an electrolyte that can shuttle charges back and forth.

When the battery is in use — a phase known as "discharge" — the lithium metal and porous carbon electrodes are connected to an external circuit. Lithium ions can then travel to the carbon electrode and form lithium peroxide. This chemical process drives an external electrical current, Wu told Live Science in an email.

To recharge the solar battery, light hits the mesh panel and generates electron-hole pairs, which can carry an electrical charge. One of the most important features of the device is that it uses added molecules, known as redox shuttle additives, to transfer these charges from the mesh solar panel to the lithium electrode, where they cause the lithium peroxide to decompose into oxygen and lithium ions.
The oxygen is released out of the cell, but the lithium ions, as well as electrical charges, are stored inside the battery in the lithium electrode, Wu said.

“Basically, it's a breathing battery,” he said. “It breathes in air when it discharges, and breathes out when it charges.”

The researchers are still experimenting with other ways to improve the design of their solar battery, a project that is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.

#2 eds

eds

    Shifted

  • Global Moderator
  • 3,981 posts 263 rep

Posted 19 October 2014 - 06:09 PM

This could be, the disruptive change in energy costs, simplicity and flexibility,
. . . that will change everything.
I wonder if it is 3D printable?

#3 E3 wise

E3 wise

    Shifted

  • Premium Shifter
  • 1,027 posts 286 rep

Posted 19 October 2014 - 06:34 PM

some day maybe but right now no just good old people manufacturing.

#4 Shortpoet-GTD

Shortpoet-GTD

    Shifted

  • Validating
  • 8,025 posts 758 rep

Posted 20 October 2014 - 05:14 AM

Fabulous.
Intelligent brains working to help save the planet vs those that want to destroy it.

"Could provide a way to store energy."
(Like eating a sugary donut that stays on our hips until we use it for exercise.) :laugh:

#5 eds

eds

    Shifted

  • Global Moderator
  • 3,981 posts 263 rep

Posted 20 October 2014 - 05:40 AM

3D printed Solar panels?
. . . Jeremy Rifkin's Distributed Energy, at near zero cost?


0 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users