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solar+energy02 Harnessing the Sun’s Energy/Across the Universe

The energy in sunlight striking the earth for 40 minutes is equivalent to global energy consumption for a year — Zweibel et al., 2008

Energy from the sun travels to the earth in the form of electromagnetic radiation similar to radio waves, but in a different frequency range (Natural Resources Canada). Available solar energy is often expressed in units of energy per time per unit area, such as watts per square metre (W/m2). I’m told that the amount of energy available from the sun outside the Earth’s atmosphere is about 1367 W/m2, which I’ve calculated is nearly the same as a high power hair drier for every square meter of sunlight (okay, someone told me that too!)…

“Solar energy obviously harvests the sun, which on its own currently provides 99% of the world’s natural energy,” say authors of the University of Michigan website for alternative energy. The use of solar fields and solar panels is in effect today, just not on an extremely large scale. Some of the downsides of solar energy include the fact that they are relatively expensive to build at first, and that they only harvest energy when the sun is out.

According to Natural Resources Canada “There are many ways that solar energy can be used effectively. Applications of solar energy use can be grouped into there are three primary categories: heating/cooling, electricity production, and chemical processes. Tsolar+energy04 Harnessing the Sun’s Energy/Across the Universehe most widely used applications are for water and space heating. Ventilation solar air heating is also growing in popularity. Uptake of electricity producing solar technologies is increasing for the applications photovoltaics (primarily) and concentrating solar thermal-electric technologies. Due to recent advances in solar detoxification technologies for cleaning water and air, these applications hold promise to be competitive with conventional technologies.”

Solar energy has the following advantages over conventional energy:

  • The energy from the sun is virtually free after the initial cost has been recovered.
  • Depending on the utilization of energy, paybacks can be very short when compared to the cost of common energy sources used.
  • Solar and other renewable energy systems can be stand-alone; thereby not requiring connection to a power or natural gas grid.
  • The sun provides a virtually unlimited supply of solar energy.
  • The use of solar energy displaces conventional energy; which usually results in a proportional decrease in green house gas emissions.
  • The use of solar energy is an untapped market.

solar+energy05 Harnessing the Sun’s Energy/Across the UniverseBy 2050 solar power could end U.S. dependence on foreign oil and slash greenhouse gas emissions.” suggest Zweibel et al. (2008). Their recent article in Scientific American (January, 2008 issue) suggests a plausible scenario by 2050: 69 percent of electricity in the U.S. and 35 percent of its total energy would be supplied by solar energy. This would, of course, involve a massive switch from coal, oil, natural gas and nuclear energy currently in use in North America.

Here’s what it would look like: a vast area of the Southwest would be covered in photovoltaic cells with excess daytime energy being stored as compressed air in underground caverns (to be tapped during nighttime). Large solar concentrator power plants would deliver a direct current power transmission backbone of solar electricity across the country.

In order for this scenario to happen, though, $420 billion in subsidies from 2011 to 2050 would be required to fun the infrastructure and make it cost-competitive, says the article. How likely is that? If the government recognizes that the payoff is far greater to the investment, then it is a good bet that this could indeed happen. Here are some of the advantages: solar panels consume little or no fuel, saving billions of dollars annually. The solar infrastructure would replace an inefficient and fuel-glutting system of coal-fired power plants and gas plants. No oil would be imported, along with the obvious headaches associated with that endeavor. And here’s the part I really like: solar technology is virtually pollution-free, and would reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 1.7 billion tons a year. Another 1.9 billion tons of gas emissions would be displaced by plug-in hybrids refueled by the solar power grid, according to Zweibel et al. Furthermore, these authors contend that that by 2050, U.S. carbon emissions would be 62 percent below 2005 levels and suggest this would as much as end global warming. The authors further suggest that by 2100 renewable energy could generate 100 percent of the U.S.’s electricity and more than 90 percent of its energy.

According to the U.S. Department of Energy, here’s a look at some things we can expect in the future from solar technologies:

“All our buildings will feature energy-efficient design, construction, asolar+energy03 Harnessing the Sun’s Energy/Across the Universend materials as well as renewable energy technologies. In effect, each building will both conserve energy and produce its own supply, to be one of a new generation of cost-effective “zero-energy buildings” that have no net annual need for nonrenewable energy.

“In photovoltaic research and development, there will be more breakthroughs in new materials, cell designs, and novel approaches to product development. In a solar future, your mode of transportation—and even the clothes you wear—could produce clean, safe electric power.

“With today’s technology roadmaps to lead the way, concentrating solar power will be fully competitive with conventional power-generating technologies within a decade. Concentrating solar power, or solar thermal electricity, could harness enough of the sun’s energy to provide large-scale, domestically secure, and environmentally friendly electricity, especially in the southwestern United States.

“The enormous solar power potential of the Southwest—comparable in scale to the huge hydropower resource of the Northwest—will be realized. A desert area 10 miles by 15 miles could provide 20,000 megawatts of power, and the electricity needs of the entire United States could theoretically be met by a photovoltaic array within an area 100 miles on a side.
Within 10 years, photovoltaic power will be competitive in price with traditional sources of electricity.

“Solar electricity will be used in an electrolysis process that separates the hydrogen and oxygen in water so the hydrogen can be used in fuel cells for transportation and in buildings.”

Zweibel, K., J. Mason and V. Fthenakis. 2008. By 2050 solar power could end U.S. dependence on foreign oil and slash greenhouse gas emissions. In Scientific American, January 2008 issue.

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nanobot Power to the Tiny: Nanogenerators Scavenge Energy

So nat’ralists observe, a flea
Hath smaller fleas that on him prey,
And these have smaller fleas that bite ‘em,
And so proceed ad infinitum
.”
—Johnathan Swift

The miniscule devices that fall under the title of nanotechnology have huge potential, so long as they can utilize a power source better than a battery. The successful nanotech product will rely on its ability to scavenge “waste energy” ad infinitum (as Jonathan Swift would have said). In a recent article in the Scientific American (January, 2008), Zhong Lin Wang (Director of the Centre for Nanostructure Characterization, Georgia Institute of Technology) gives the example of the 1920’s watchmaker who invented the self-winding watch. Mechanically harvesting energy from the wearer’s moving arm and putting it to work rewinding the watch was a brilliant concept. This snanotech02 Power to the Tiny: Nanogenerators Scavenge Energyo called “waste energy” may appear in the form of vibrations, (even human pulse), acoustic waves, temperature differences, etc.

With the ability to make power on a minuscule scale, we can entertain the notion of a myriad of miraculous achievements like: implantable biosensors that continuously monitor a patient’s blood glucose levels; autonomous strain sensors for bridges, or environmental sensors to detect toxins. This would only work if replacement batteries weren’t needed. Enter the nanogenerator, a very small energy harvester of “waste energy” that supplies electrical power to a nanoscale device. Wang’s nanogenerators consist of an array of vertical zinc oxide nanowires, hexagonal crystals with both piezoelectric and semiconducting properties. An electrode with a ridged underside sits atop the nanowires and moves from side to side in response to some vibration (the human pulse or acoustic waves). As they move from side to side, the piezoelectric nanowires develop a voltage from the compressive and tensile strains on their sides. The semiconductor nanowires and conductive electrode rectify tnanotech03 Power to the Tiny: Nanogenerators Scavenge Energyhe alternating voltage and release it as direct current.

The body produces a variety of sources for “waste energy” that nanogenerators can tap into. For instance, blood flow produces 0.93 watts of mechanical energy (0.16 W electrical energy); exhalation produces 1.0 W of mechanical energy; walking produces 67.0 W of mechanical energy; and my fingers typing this blog post produce from 6.9 to 19.0 milliwatts of mechanical energy. Okay, that actually isn’t a lot of energy. But nanogenerators don’t need to power our homes. But in the future, nanogenerators may be used to harvest and recycle the energy wasted in our daily lives.

References:
Ghalanbor Z, Marashi SA, Ranjbar B. 2005. “Nanotechnology helps medicine: nanoscale swimmers and their future applications”. Med Hypotheses 65 (1): 198-199. PMID 15893147.

Wang, Zhong Lin. 2008. Self-Powered Nanotech. In: Scientific American, January 2008.
Waldner, Jean-Baptiste .2007. Nanocomputers and Swarm Intelligence. ISTE, p26. ISBN 1847040020.

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