When politicians start
talking about renewable
energy, you know we have
problems. Solar energy is a
significant renewable energy
and here is an overview of
how the technology has
developed.
Historical
Advances in Producing
Electricity From the Sun
Solar electricity is
simply energy produced by
harnessing the sun. It comes
in many forms including
electricity production
through panels, home heating
through passive systems and
mobile packets for powering
devices like laptops and RVs
to mention only a few
platforms.
Historically, sunlight
has been used by mankind to
produce heat ever since we
first built structures.
Without electricity, mankind
soon learned to orient
structures to capture the
heat of the sun during the
day and store it in ceramic
or mud materials much like a
blacktop parking lot will
radiate heat after the sun
has gone down. Early Greek
structures show a particular
use of this solar strategy
as do Egyptian structures.
The production of
electricity using sunlight
is a much more recent
phenomena. In 1901, Nicolas
Tesla was the first person
to receive a patent related
to solar electricity, but he
called it radiant heating.
He sought a patent for a
machine to capture the
radiant heat, but nothing
much came of the invention.
In 1904, some unknown
physicist named Albert
Einstein published a paper
on the potential electricity
production from sunlight. In
1913, William Coblentz
received the first patent
for a solar cell, but he
could never make it work. In
1916, Robert Millikan was
the first to produce
electricity with the cell.
For the next forty years or
so, nobody made much
progress because the cells
were highly inefficient at
converting sunlight to
energy.
In the 1950s, Bell Labs
got involved with NASA. Bell
was charged with coming up
with a solar platform to
power spacecraft once they
were in orbit. The solar
industry would never be the
same.
Gerald L. Pearson, Daryl
M. Chapin, and Calvin S.
Fuller started researching
different areas related to
solar, but not active parts
of the NASA project. By
luck, they meet and
exchanged ideas. While their
individual projects were
failures, their combined
efforts produce a much more
efficient cell using
crystallized silicon to
convert sunlight into
electricity. The efficiency
rate of the cells was
roughly 6 percent, a marked
improvement over previous
technology. In 1958, NASA
launched the Vanguard
Spacecraft, which was
powered by solar panels.
In the following years,
solar technology grew in
leaps and bounds. Solar
panels today are roughly 15
percent efficient, but also
much smaller than they use
to be. More importantly,
companies are abandoning the
panel platform and coming
out with amazing new
products. The first are
shingles that look exactly
like regular roof shingles
and perform as such.
Nanotechnology is also
offering amazing
possibilities with quantum
dots, which are essentially
solar panels on the quantum
level. Eventually, these
dots will be incorporated in
things such as paint. Yes,
the paint on the walls of
buildings and homes will
eventually also produce all
the electricity needed for
the structures.
Man has used the power of
the sun for heat for a very
long time. Only now,
however, are we starting to
master the technology to
turn it into large amounts
of free electricity.
Rick Chapo is with
SolarCompanies.com, a
directory of
solar energy companies.
Visit us to read more
articles on
solar power and
renewable energy.
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