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Windows could be used as powerful solar panels thanks to a clever new technology that concentrates the sun\’s rays. The technique uses transparent dyes to capture, concentrate and redirect light along the surface of the glass to photovoltaic (PV) cells in the frame, which convert the light into electricity. The breakthrough means that there is a tenfold increase in power output compared to use of the PV cell alone.

The team, from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), claims the technology could slash the cost of generating electricity from sunlight, making it more competitive with standard grid power. This is because the expensive PV cells only need to be installed at the sides of the panels, rather than across the whole surface.

No, it\’s not a solution yet. The dyes that do the work currently only last three months in operation. But the stream of innovations that are coming along (as Lomborg predicted they would and didn\’t he get stick for that) rather show up the government\’s current plans to build all those windmills. They\’re choosing a technology again and, as ever, look to have got the wrong one.

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Mark Wadsworth
17 years ago

Please keep quiet about this, or they’ll start subsidising glass manufacturers and thus stifle this fine idea at birth.

Roger Thornhill
17 years ago

This kind of simplicity is superb.

Serf
Serf
17 years ago

http://www.sunrgi.com/ claim to have made photoelectric cells that can compete with coal.

All we have to do is add carbon tax and wait. The solution will come along shortly.

Mark Brinkley
17 years ago

Bet they’ll be really useful at night.

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