Filed under: Business News, New Technology, Solar Gadgets, Solar Panels, Solar Power
Established thin-film technologies include “amorphous silicon”, an unstructured form of silicon which can be sprayed on to a surface. The leader in the field is United Solar Ovonics, which produces 30MW a year of amorphous silicon generation, and plans to triple that within a year. Competing producers of thin-film replace silicon with other materials. Companies such as First Solar, Solar Antec, Flisom, Daystar and Nanosolar are all involved.
The real cutting edge, however, are “third generation” solar technologies. Graetzel’s cells, called dye sensitised solar cells, use tiny nano-sized crystals of titanium to generate electricity in a process closer to that used by plants in photosynthesis than to traditional photovoltaic generation.
G24 Innovations Limited (G24i), a UK company, plans to be one of the first to commercially produce the cells, developed by Konarka, a US start up, to sell as chargers for mobile phones and mp3 players, and to the military, for uses such as tents which also act as chargers. G24i’s cells can operate at lower light intensities than conventional solar cells and they will be one-50th the weight of conventional solar cells and highly flexible.
In Israel, Orion Solar is also working on a version of the Graetzel design. It is designing large sheets that can be attached onto the roofs of houses. Another company, Nanosolar is working on polymers that will allow it to commercialise a printable cell at a fifth of the cost of traditional solar cells.
There is so much investment going into solar power today that new breakthroughs are certain, which is excellent news. But if it is, as its proponents promise, one day destined to eclipse fossil fuels, don’t expect this to happen for a while yet.
Motorola has won a patent for technology which the company claims will allow mobile phone batteries to be recharged via solar cells embedded within the LCD of the phone, reports EBN Online. The company has settled the problem of allowing enough light to reach the solar cells to recharge the batteries. According to Motorola, it can get 75 percent or more of the light entering through the front of an LCD to the solar cell by using a cholesteric or polymer disbursed liquid crystal.
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Home appliance maker Tatung Co (大同) plans to increase investment in the production of glass solar cells, riding on the rosy prospects of the solar energy industry, a top company official said yesterday.
Part of the plan will involve resource integration, with Tatung working with its subsidiaries Green Energy Technology Inc (綠能科技) and Chunghwa Picture Tubes Ltd (中華映管), as glass cells and liquid-crystal-display (LCD) panels share similarities in production, Tatung chairman Lin Wei-shan (林蔚山) told shareholders.
Green Energy is the nation’s largest manufacturer of solar photovoltaic multicrystalline silicon wafers, while Chunghwa Picture Tubes is the nation’s third-largest manufacturer of LCD panels.
Lin, who also doubles as Green Energy’s chairman, said that sales of Green Energy are forecast to surpass the NT$10 billion (US$300 million) mark next year, thanks to product diversification from silicon wafers and glass membrane solar cells to solar energy solutions.
Fueled by the red hot solar demand, Green Energy posted sales of NT$2.4 billion last year, a sharp 592 percent rise from NT$352.4 million a year ago. It also posted net profits of NT$506.8 million last year, compared with losses of NT$60.1 million a year earlier.
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http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/biz/archives/2007/05/23/2003362156
Filed under: Solar Gadgets
The Voltaic™ solar bags and solar backpacks are mobile power generators, designed to charge your devices using solar energy without tying you to a power outlet, which makes them perfect for traveling.Just plug your standard 12V car lighter cord from your device into the solar backpack and recharge most small electronics including: cell phones, cameras, two way radios, iPods, GPS, PDA’s, and MP3s.
If you don’t have a 12V car cord for your device, these solar bags and solar backpacks come with a set of 11 standard adaptors for common cell phones and other devices.
Embedded in the outside of the bags are three lightweight, tough, waterproof solar panels which generate up to 4 watts of power. This means quicker charge times!
Inside each bag is a Li Ion battery pack which stores any surplus power generated, so it is available when you need it- not just when the sun is up. The battery pack can also be charged using an AC travel charger or car charger (both included). This makes the Voltaic™ solar backpacks and solar bags just as useful on the grid as off.
This high quality solar product is ideal for emergencies, travelers, backpackers and everyday gadget users.







