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Soldiers to be solar powered

Source: Government News -Australia / 23 June 2008
http://www.governmentnews.com.au/2008/06/23/article/HHUVBSVXUK.html

Australian soldiers will be able to wear and carry new solar technology embedded uniforms and gears, now that researchers at Australian National University (ANU) have won a major defence contract. The Centre for Sustainable Energy Systems (CSES) at ANU has received $2.1 million in defence funding to develop micro-thin and flexible solar energy panels for security applications.
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Solar energy turns organic

June 23rd, 2008 by kalyan89 in PV-General, R&D reports, Thin film solar cells of CIS, CIGS

Hiroshi Imahori and Tomokazu Umeyama explain why carbon nanotubes are promising candidates for organic solar cells.
18 June 2008
Source: Chemical Technology, Royal Society of Chemistry
http://www.rsc.org/Publishing/ChemTech/Volume/2008/07/Imahori_insight.asp

Cheap and efficient conversion of solar energy into electricity could help combat global warming and the shortage of fossil fuels. However, the high production cost of electricity from silicon-based solar cells has limited the use of the technology. Low cost solar cells with high cell performance are highly desirable and organic solar cells could be the answer. They are easy to make from inexpensive organic materials and, unlike inorganic solar cells, are lightweight, flexible and colourful. (more…)

Oregon State Univ. designs new solar panels

June 23rd, 2008 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, R&D reports

By Matt Neznanski, (Corvallis) Gazette-Times, Corvallis, OR, June 21, 2008
Source: TheWorldLink
http://www.theworldlink.com/articles/2008/06/21/news/doc485ca762cbb99337057697.txt

When Oregon State University researchers first announced they had created a transparent transistor, John Wager, professor of electrical and computer engineering, said it was too early to tell what practical applications might arise from it.  Five years later, the technology has found its first industrial use: making solar panels lighter, more efficient and with the ability to blend in or accent a building’s architecture. (more…)

Highlights of Photovoltaics beyond Conventional Silicon event

June 23rd, 2008 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, R&D reports

Source: Printed Electronics World, 23 June 2008
http://www.idtechex.com/printedelectronicsworld/articles/
highlights_of_photovoltaics_beyond_conventional_silicon_event_00000971.asp

The second day of the conference began with keynote presentations from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory and the Idaho National Laboratory.  Prof. Arthur Frank of the NREL gave some insight into the type of research they conduct on sensitized solar cells, both dye and quantum dot.  The NREL’s research efforts on DSSC’s focus on better matching dye absorption coefficients to the solar spectrum. The resulting improvements could lead to an increase of photocurrent by 40% and efficiencies going from 11% to 20%. (more…)

Nanosolar touts 1 gigawatt solar cell machine

June 23rd, 2008 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, R&D reports, SC Company Reports

by Martin LaMonica, June 18, 2008
Source: CNet News Green Tech Blog
http://news.cnet.com/8301-11128_3-9972306-54.html

Upstart Nanosolar says that it has built the Ferrari of solar cell manufacturing: a one gigawatt machine that prints solar cells at 100 feet per minute.  In the company blog, CEO Martin Roscheisen on Wednesday said that the one gigawatt machine is a first for the solar industry, orders of magnitude more “capital efficient” than existing production techniques. (more…)

Sharp, Canon, Sanyo Take Top 3 Spots in Photovoltaic Technology Ranking

June 6th, 2008 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, R&D reports

by Mami Akasaka, Tech-On!, Jun 4, 2008
Source: TechOn
http://techon.nikkeibp.co.jp/english/NEWS_EN/20080604/152849/

A consulting firm evaluated the technological competitiveness of Japanese companies involved in photovoltaic business and ranked Sharp, Canon and Sanyo as the top three.  Intellectual Property Bank Corp (IPB), a consulting firm specializing in intellectual property right, compiled the “applicant score ranking.” The “applicant score” is its proprietary indicator, which is designed to evaluate applicants’ patent strength based on the quality and number of patents filed. Sharp Corp, Canon Inc and Sanyo Electric Co Ltd were ranked first, second and third, respectively. (more…)

Competition Heating up in Solar-cell Market in India

by Motonobu Kawai, Nikkei Microdevices, Jun 6, 2008
Source: TechOn
http://techon.nikkeibp.co.jp/english/NEWS_EN/20080606/152919/

Solar cell manufacturing in India is being established more rapidly than other devices. Several emerging manufacturers began volume production in 2007, while existing manufacturers are increasing output.  According to Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science, an Indian research institute, solar cell production in India is expected to rise from 80MW per year in 2007 to 350MW in 2012 and 3GW in 2022 *1. In fact, however, solar cell production in India is likely to increase much faster than these forecasts.   [*1: “Solar Phtovoltaics in India: Status and Prospects” by Barua A., released at the 17th International Photovoltaic Science and Engineering Conference, 2007] (more…)

Fraunhofer Institute orders AIXTRON 300mm MOCVD tool for III-V-Si Solar Cells

June 5th, 2008 by kalyan89 in PV Industry - Asia, R&D reports

Aachen/Germany, June 3, 2008
Source: Aixtron AG press release
http://www.aixtron.com/index.php?id=312

AIXTRON AG announced today an order from the Fraunhofer Institut für Solare Energiesysteme (Fraunhofer ISE) for a 300mm Close Coupled Showerhead CRIUS epitaxy reactor.  Fraunhofer ISE, located in Freiburg, Germany, will use the system for the research and development of GaAs-based multi-junction solar cells on Si.  “Within the scope of the BMBF project “III-V-Si” we will receive AIXTRON’s Close Coupled Showerhead system,” said Dr. Frank Dimroth, head of the III-V-Epitaxy and Solar Cells group.

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Suntech sees costs halving in 5 years

June 4th, 2008 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, R&D reports, SC Company Reports

By Nichola Groom, Los Angeles, CA, June 3, 2008
Source: Reuters UK
http://uk.reuters.com/article/oilRpt/idUKN0336042620080603

Solar cell maker Suntech Power Holdings Co Ltd’s (STP.N: Quote, Profile, Research) silicon costs per watt should drop to $1 in the next five years, about half of current levels, enabling its products to compete without government incentives, a top executive said on Tuesday.  “We feel that in the next five years our product could survive without the need for government subsidies,” Suntech Chief Strategy Officer Steven Chan said by phone at the Reuters Global Energy Summit.

Demand for renewable energy has skyrocketed recently, yet the industry still depends on government subsidies to make power produced from solar panels or wind farms competitive with electricity from dirtier coal or gas-fired plants.  Today, Suntech’s silicon costs per watt are between $2 and $2.20, while non-silicon costs are about 70 cents or 80 cents per watt, Chan said. In the next five years, silicon costs per watt should drop to $1, while non-silicon costs should fall to between 50 cents and 60 cents per watt, Chan said.

Suntech expects production of about 530 megawatts (MW) this year, Chan said. One megawatt, or 1 million watts, is enough energy to power about 800 homes. Lower silicon prices, which Chan expects to start to see next year, would be a major factor in reducing the cost of solar power and eliminating the need for subsidies, Chan said.

Silicon is the key raw material used to make computer chips and most photovoltaic solar cells, which turn sunlight into electricity. Soaring demand for renewable energy, however, has led to skyrocketing prices on silicon, leading China-based Suntech to make several investments in silicon providers.

At the summit, Chan said those deals are reducing how much Suntech pays for silicon by 20 percent or more.  “The fact that we made these equity investments in various silicon providers has helped a lot,” Chan said.

Average selling prices on Suntech’s solar products should drop 10 percent next year, followed by annual declines of 7 percent thereafter, Chan said. To help expand its fast-growing business, Chan said Suntech over the next two or three years will consider setting up manufacturing facilities closer to the places where it does business, such as the United States and Europe.

The company’s recent acquisition of Germany’s KSL-Kuttler Automation, which will supply equipment for Suntech’s manufacturing process, will help the company open facilities in countries where production costs are higher than in China, where its solar cells are produced currently. “A big part of buying this German automation company is to automate our production lines in a way that we can set up production in high-labor-cost geographies and not really suffer a high cost structure,” Chan said.

Suntech shares were up 7 cents at $41.12 in afternoon New York Stock Exchange trade.

First Solar MD to Outline Latest Developments in Thin Flm Solar Cells

May 31st, 2008 by kalyan89 in R&D reports, SC Company Reports

Source: Azo.com /May 22, 2008
http://www.azom.com/news.asp?newsID=12309

Managing director Stephan Hansen of First Solar (GmbH) – one of the worlds fastest growing manufacturers of thin-film solar modules – will speak at an international conference in Munich on June 11th about the future opportunities of thin-film solar technology.  The number of solar projects with this technology has been growing rapidly in recent years, especially in countries like Spain, Italy, France and Germany where governments have successfully promoted photovoltaics and conditions for solar energy are attractive. (more…)

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