Solar energy – The Only Alternative To Fossil Fuel

Sun is the source of all energy on earth. Capturing the solar energy was done by humans in the past as well. Initially it was for drying and heating by direct contact. Now the most important need of the human race is the electric energy and we have devised methods to harness the energy of sun for that also.

 

The technologies used to capture solar energy are characterized into either passive solar or active solar. Active solar technologies involve usage of photovoltaic cells, solar thermal panels, solar cookers, etc. Passive usage of sun’s energy involves construction of buildings so as to receive maximum amount of light rays and designing areas which naturally circulate air.

 

The solar energy which falls on the earth for one hour is about the same that we humans use in one year. The earth receives about 174 petawatts of incoming radiation at the upper atmosphere. The solar energy is available at different intensities at different geographical locations; therefore, for best use of the solar energy there are certain factors to take into consideration.

 

Solar energy is a potential alternative for fossil fuels. It is a renewable source of energy and will be available as long as the sun lasts. It is estimated that the sun will be shining for another 4.5 million years more. Even then effective capitalization on this free source is hindered by the lack of proper advancement of the technical knowhow. At present the solar energy is captured using solar cells, also called photovoltaic cell which is only 15% efficient.

 

Advantages of Using Solar energy

  1. It is the cheapest energy source available. After the initial investments are recovered, it is basically a free source of energy. The use of solar energy does not require any fuel. The savings from the investment is immediate. The reduction in health cost due to use of solar energy is high.
  2. It is a renewable source of energy which does not harm our environment in any way because the pollution induced by solar energy is nil. There is no release of nitrogen oxide, carbon di oxide, sulphur dioxide, or mercury into the atmosphere. It contributes for reduction of harmful greenhouse gas emission. Since it is mostly generated where it is needed, the cost involved in transportation and recovery is nil.
  3. Most of the solar energy systems work independently. There are no strings attached to it. There are no monthly bills or tax. Government subsidies are available for its establishment and maintenance. It reduces our dependency on centralized sources of energy, so that in the event of a disaster there will be sustained provision of energy for us.
  4. The maintenance costs associated a solar energy system is very minimal. Once established it will last for about 10 years without further maintenance.

 

There are also certain disadvantages in choosing a solar power plant. The main fact which outstretch is the initial cost of installing. Considering its numerous advantages this is the best available alternative to the present deteriorating fossil fuel.

More on energy self sufficent homes

“Mrs Foster and her son, Ken Harcombe, have built a house at Whangateau, near Leigh, which is completely self-sufficient in energy with a windmill, four photovoltaic solar energy panels, a solar water heater and a woodburning stove. The house cost only $200,000. But the windmill cost just over $2000, the four solar panels cost $2000 each plus $4000 for an “inverter”, which allows them to run normal appliances, the solar water heater cost more than $3000 and the wood stove, $12,000.”

A Total of $29k for self sufficiency, no grid power connected at all since it was going to cost $20k for the line. The article points out that a cheaper stove could have been chosen. What the article dosnt say though is what lifestyle choices had to be made to accomdate this situation nor what the running and maintenance costs might be.

On the surface this looks a great arrangement and goes a long way to proving that NZ can avoid problems with energy shortages that have
plagued us since before the second world war. While this lifestyle will not be everyones choice I am sure the reduction of the domestic component it could provide would go a long way to reducing the demand currently on our generation resources.

Even if only solar water heating was used by all new domestic buildings (and smaller commercial buildings) the demand reduction would be
significant, but is the Govt (or the energy companies) considering this, no and NO, and why not? Because they lose too much!

Open House for Solar Energy

Utilizing the power of the Sun to provide energy for homes has developed into a fine art. This month, Energy Awareness Month, the American Solar Energy Society is coordinating the opening of hundreds of private homes across the country for public viewing.

People will be able to tour more than 800 homes and businesses powered by solar energy in 44 states and see first hand the benefits of the clean, nonpolluting power of the Sun.

The home and business owners will explain to visitors how photovoltaic cells for electricity and passive solar energy systems for heat work. Some homeowners will explain how they can sell electricity generated by their solar installations back to their local utility through a process known as net metering.

Especially in California, dealing with its energy crunch, the idea that sunny days can be turned into electricity is appealing. California Energy Commissioner Robert Pernell said, “Photovoltaic panels, small wind turbines, and fuel cells can be installed in existing structures or incorporated into new construction. These tours are a good way for homeowners who are interested in learning more about this type of energy technology to see the systems working, ask questions, and find out which system best suits their needs.”

This coming weekend, Oct. 13 and 14, the public is invited to visit private homes throughout Los Angeles that use solar technology. Solar homes in Santa Monica, Culver City, and Hollywood will be open on the Real Places For Real People tour, sponsored by the solar and renewable energy nonprofit organization Global Possibilities.

Casey Coates Danson, founding president of Global Possibilities, said, “The homes on this tour are making a great contribution to mitigating climate change by using solar energy. It will take the participation of many more individuals like these to make a substantial impact on climate change.”

Danson’s own 4,500-square-foot residence, a highlight of the tour, is the largest private residence in Los Angeles using solar technology.  Also on Oct. 13, solar homes farther north in California will be open. Tours sponsored by the Northern California Solar Energy Association offer 35 sites in the East Bay, Silicon Valley, Contra Costa, and Santa Cruz featuring solar power, photovoltaic systems, solar water and space heating, passive solar, and green building materials.

“This is a great opportunity for the public to see how solar power can maximize home energy efficiency and why a home with renewable energy
is a good investment,” said Ed Nold, owner and founder of Green Home Design, a consulting firm specializing in putting environmental commitments into practice in residential construction projects.

California Congresswoman Jane Harman, a Democrat and a Venice Beach resident, recently added solar panels to her home. “It was not a tough
choice,” she said.” I live on the beach and the sun beats down on my roof almost every day. Photovoltaic technologies convert that energy to usable electricity with no polluting byproducts. Hopefully more people will choose clean, efficient solar over antiquated fossil
generation.”

Pernell assures interested people on a tight budget, “Many renewable technologies that are available today for California homes and businesses are also eligible for a state rebate.”

Opportunities abound in other areas of the country. Near Chatanooga, Tenn., the Sequatchie Valley Institute is inviting people to tour its facilities, which model environmental sustainability. They feature hand-crafted passive solar buildings that utilize solar and wind-powered electricity. Surrounding the Center is a permaculture farm with edible landscaping integrated into the forest ecosystem.

In the nation’s capital, the Potomic Region Solar Energy Association is hosting the solar tour in cooperation with Sierra Club, Virginia Solar Council, and American Solar Energy Council. The tour will include the home of Mike Tidwell and Catherine Varchaver, which was featured in a Washington Post article on Oct. 6.

Even in cold North Dakota, a solar home will be open near Carson to display a solar-wind hybrid system. The tour is hosted by Dakota Solar Electric, which designs and installs solar-powered water systems for ranchers in North Dakota.

In conjunction with the Denver self-guided solar home tour, the National Renewable Energy Lab in nearby Golden, Colo., is hosting an exhibitor showcase featuring 25 local companies and organizations that provide renewable energy and energy efficiency products and services.

Solar concentration mirrors in the outer solar system

Whenever settlement of the outer solar system is discussed in this ng, it’s always assumed that it will be done using fusion power to provide energy, with an “edge of sunlight”, beyond which solar photovoltaics which cannot be used, around 3 A.U.

The edge of sunlight, commonly put at 3 A.U., could possibly be extended to hundreds of times that by using extremely thin mirrors to concentrate the attenuated solar light.  The mirrors could be aluminum a few tens of atoms thick, and an array of flat mirrors could be aimed with a support structure to focus this for useful solar energy and/or light.

To supply 1 gw. of electrical power at earth orbit using the best photovoltaic cells available (~ 30% conversion efficiency), an area of 2.38 x 10^6 square meters is required.  For getting the same electrical power at distances further from the sun, an area of mirrors is required amounting to

   Area = A_e x Distance^2 / E

where

   A_e = area at earth orbit = 2.38 x 10^6 m2
   Distance = distance in A.U.
   E = efficiency factor based on the reflectivity of the mirror,
          and how well the light reflected hits the photovoltaics
          due to possible aiming problems or mirror deformation.

and

   Mass = Area x T x M_sp x Factor_s

where

   Mass = entire mass of mirror system (kg)
   T = thickness of mirror (m)
   M_sp = mass density of mirror material (kg/m3)
   Factor_s = factor for extra mass required for the support structure
                 for the mirrors.

Using an efficiency factor of 50%, a thickness of 40 nm, a mass density of 5 gm/cm3 (= 5000 kg/m3) (I don’t know the density of aluminum off-hand so I used this), and a support structure factor of 2, one gets                          

     distance  area required  mass required
                              (A.U.)    (m2)           (kg)

orbit of Pluto                35        5.83 x 10^9    2.33 x 10^6

current outer
edge of the Kuiper belt       70        2.33 x 10^10   9.32 x 10^6

furthest orbit of Sedna,
inner edge of the Oort cloud  900       3.86 x 10^12   1.54 x 10^9

These could be made from chunks of aluminum only 10, 16, and 83 meters across respectively.

Problems erosion of the mirrors by dust and meteorites damage by the solar wind and/or cosmic rays reflectivity being obscured by dust particles or organic matter collecting on the surface solar sail effect which makes the mirror system(or what it is attached to) move  manufacturing the huge mirrors in the first place

Solutions?

 Give the mirrors a static charge so they might have net mass collecting capability instead of mass loss.

 Attach the mirror system to its space settlement and orient it so that the settlement slowly spirals down toward a more desirable location closer to the sun.

Other possibilities

 Instead of using mirrors, use photovoltaic cells themselves.  Assumes an extremely cheap way of manufacturing them of course.

 Have mirrors with a reflector made from organic materials (if there are any), which would make it lighter than an aluminum    one and from more common organic elements.  Or make a concentrating lense instead of a mirror.

Have there been any studies done on this subject?  I think it’s very worthwhile looking at, given how much time and trouble we’ve had getting controlled fusion power to work.  Also a space settlement out there in the Kuiper belt might want to save their deuterium for more useful things like propulsion, self-defense, etc.

Vast new energy source almost here

Solar hydrogen fuel dream will soon be a reality Australian scientists predict that a revolutionary new way to harness the power of the sun to extract clean and almost unlimited energy supplies from water will be a reality within seven years. Using special titanium oxide ceramics that harvest sunlight and split water to produce hydrogen fuel, the researchers say it will then be a simple engineering exercise to make an energy-harvesting device with no moving parts and emitting no greenhouse gases or pollutants. It would be the cheapest, cleanest and most abundant energy source ever developed: the main by-products would be oxygen and water. “This is potentially huge, with a market the size of all the existing markets for coal, oil and gas combined,” says Professor Janusz Nowotny, who with Professor Chris Sorrell is leading a solar hydrogen research project at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) Centre for Materials and Energy Conversion. The team is thought to be the most advanced in developing the cheap, light-sensitive materials that will be the basis of the technology. “Based on our research results, we know we are on the right track and with the right support we now estimate that we can deliver a new material within seven years,” says Nowotny. Sorrell says Australia is ideally placed to take advantage of the enormous potential of this new technology: “We have abundant sunlight, huge reserves of titanium and we’re close to the burgeoning energy markets of the Asia-Pacific region. But this technology could be used anywhere in the world. It’s been the dream of many people for a long time to develop it and it’s exciting to know that it is now within such close reach.”
The results of the team’s work will be presented in Sydney on 27 August to delegates from Japan, Germany, the United States and Australia at a one-day
International Conference on Materials for Hydrogen Energy at UNSW. Among them will be the inventors of the solar hydrogen process, Professors
Akira Fujishima and Kenichi Honda. Both are frontrunners for the Nobel Prize in chemistry and are the laureates of the 2004 Japan Prize.
Since the Japanese researchers’ 1971 discoveries, science has made major advances in achieving one of the ultimate goals of science and technology -
the design of materials required to split water using solar light. The UNSW team opted to use titania ceramic photoelectrodes because they have
the right semiconducting properties and the highest resistance to water corrosion.
Solar hydrogen, Professor Sorrell argues, is not incompatible with coal. It can be used to produce solar methanol, which produces less carbon dioxide
than conventional methods. “As a mid-term energy carrier it has a lot to say for it,” he says.

Economics of solar energy

1) With solar electricity, the price is only investment. You must pay 100% of your next 30 years electricity bill before you get the very first kWh. As soon as your system is installed – and paid – the power is free. Even if were profitable on such a long time compared to classic power, many people would still prefer to pay as they use it (inertia, upfront capital…)

2) Classic energy rate is likely to rise, while solar energy prices is expected to go down. The curbs should cross between 2010 and 2020. Just as
the computer prices felt regularily since 1980 (Moore’s law), one’s interest is to wait a couple of months or years before one buys his or her solar
panels. These two problems are a major barrier for the growth of PV. But I also see good news.

Many people who invest in mutual funds for their retirement worry about the future value of they fund. Especially when all the papyboomers will
simultaneously claim their share, the stocks may fell at this time. The timeline here is 20 to 30 years ahead. Solar energy may well be the only industry who can proudly say: “I guarantee you that my product will be in high demand and more and more profitable in 20 or 30 years”

One way to boost the pv market should be to encourage mutual funds to buy the pv, install them at the consumer’s place and sell the output at a
long-term defined price: ex 15c/kwh for 30 years! (only corrected for general inflation). They’d have a guaranteed source of revenue much more
stable than Nasdaq stocks or the price of oil barrel, and the consumer will be happy to have affordable energy whatever happens in the world.

Converting material matter into energy

Almost anything will burn if you get it hot enough; but asside from fission, fusion, and water power, most of the energy we use these days comes from  easily combustible matter such as wood, coal, or petroleum products. Through the years we’ve learned to safely control and direct this combustion with external combustion steam engines and internal combution gas; diesel, jet and rocket engines.

Our dependence on petroleum products has increased over the years, and our realization that the supply is limited has increased our efforts to find similary safe and inexpensive materials from which to extract energy.

If it’s any help; the process of converting material matter into energy goes something like this: First comes the conversion to the molecular motion of heat, which creates expansion, and thrust; which is used directly in jet and rocket engines or converted to molar linear, or rotary motion through various levers and cranking mechanisims.

The gathering and storing of solar energy must be approached carefully and regulated so as not to upset our environment and nature’s balance;
where the solar energy received each day is given off each night: But maybe a safe compromise can be arranged.

Solar energy delegation to Nicaragua!

An opportunity to offer your hands, heart, and a unique gift: Solar Energy to a rural community in Nicaragua!

The Grupo Fenix invites interested parties to participate directly in its development and vision. We  offer a 12-day workshop/tour in which participants learn about solar energy systems, study applications specific to Central America, visit renewable energy installations, and install a PV lighting system in a rural village.  The program includes recreational and cultural activities. The next 12-day workshop will run from the 4th of January to the 16th, 2004.  The cost of the entire trip, excluding air fare and airport expenses, is $850 per person, which includes a $200 subsidy towards solar equipment for the villages   and $100 to development funds in the barrios and villages where Fenix is working. The course is taught in English and Spanish with simultaneous translation into English. (Spanish ability greatly enhances your experience of Nicaragua, and the Summer course will be taught mostly by Nicaraguans and include more Spanish.)  The course design for 2004 includes new hands on experiences and highlights the socio economic impact Grupo Fenix has had in the process implementing renewable energy for sustainable development. New students welcome and previous students encouraged to return.

A PROBLEM: More than 60% of Nicaragua’s rural population have no electricity,  and the cost of electricity is high for poor Nicaraguans. Rural poor rely on wood to fuel in-home stoves for cooking, and more than half of the energy consumed in the country is for firewood for cooking. The resultant deforestation has caused the drying up local rivers, serious erosion and loss of top soil, and mud slides that have killed thousands. Campesinos must
walk progressively farther to encounter firewood or purchase the wood at rising cost. Health concerns related to cooking with firewood include respiratory diseases, which now leads contaminated water as a major cause of illness and death. These problems particularly affect women and children, who are most likely to spend significant time in smoke-filled kitchens.

A SOLUTION: Grupo Fenix was started in 1996 by a group of enthusiastic engineering students at the National Engineering University (UNI).  They chose the name ?Grupo Fenix? receiving inspiration from the mythical bird of Egyptian sun worship, the Phoenix, which is forever renewed, and expresses the hope of these young Nicaraguans that their poor, strife-torn country would rise from the ashes of war and build an enlightened society.  Since 1996, Grupo Fenix has developed into an association of member organizations with academic, non profit and business affiliations which  have been promoting,
researching and implementing the use of renewable energy resources in Nicaragua, especially in rural areas.

Solar Energy Milestones

For thousands of years people have used sunlight to warm their homes. Socrates (470-399 B.C.) taught the importance of placing homes so the interior rooms could warm the interior rooms during winter. Here are just a few highlights of historic solar energy developments: Destruction of Roman fleet (212 B.C.) – Archimedes is reported to have ignited invading Roman ships by means of reflected sunlight. Diamond melted (1695) – Two Italian experimenters succeeded in melting a diamond using focused sunlight.

Solar furnace (1774) – The French chemist Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier made a solar furnace that melted platinum. Solar powered printing press (1878) – A large parabolic reflector collected enough sunlight to power a printing press. Solar steam engine (1901) – A.G.Eneas designed a solar steam engine that pumped irrigation water in Arizona. Sunlight was collected by 1,788 mirrors installed in a fixture that resembled a giant umbrella 33.5 feet (about 10 meters) in diameter. Solar engine (1908) – John Boyles and H.E. Willsie demonstrated a 15 – horse- power engine powered by pools of water that captured and stored the heat from sunlight.

Solar electrical plant (1913)- Frank Shuman and C.V. Boys built the world’s first solar-powered electrical plant near Cairo, Egypt. The huge facility
used seven solar collectors, each 204 feet (about 62 meters) long. The collectors had a total area of 13,000 square feet (about 1,208 square meters). They automatically tracked the sun.

Solar oven (1925) – C.G. Abbot of the Smithsonian Institution cooked meals using a solar-powered oven at his sun observatory on the Mount Wilson,
California. Solar furnace (1950′s) – French scientist Felix Trombe designed the world’s largest solar furnace. This facility, whose 9,000 mirrors are installed on the side of a building, can reach the temperature of the sun’s surface, 10,000 degrees fahrenheit (about 5,538 degrees celsius).

Silicon solar cell (1954) – Gerald Pearson, Daryl Chapin and Calvin Fuller of Bell Laboratories development led to the modern era of photovoltaic solar
power conversion. Mid-East oil crisis (1970′s) – The oil crisis of the 1970′s stimulated significant new research in solar energy. Old kinds of solar energy systems were improved and new kinds were developed. Thin-film solar cell (1980′s) – Many kinds of solar cells have been developed, but thin-film cells of silicon and other semi-conductors are among the most important. They can be made as flexible sheets much larger than standard silicon solar cells.

SpiderMan’s Supplemental Origin

The amount of solar energy that strikes the Earth is irrelevant. Superman only has access to the energy that strikes Superman.  That gives him access to the energy of a single solar panel, or a small bush.

It shouldn’t be necessary to do the math.  Anyone who spends 5 minutes outside should have a rough idea of how much energy strikes a human
being.  (Were you instantantly incinerated?  No?  Can Superman incinerate a large boulder with heat vision?  Yes?  Gee, wouldn’t it take at least a few weeks to accumulate that much energy?)

But let’s do the math anyway:

At this distance, the sun provides about 1353 W/m^2 of power in space. On Earth, you have to divide by 4 because about half the energy is
reflected by clouds, and another half is lost at night.  Toss in a reasonable estimate of 100 cm^2 for the surface area of Superman’s face and hands (which are the parts he normally exposes), and you get 33.8 Watts.  Call it about 30 Watts if you want to account for the fact that Superman must reflect *some* light, or he’d be jet black.

So the next time you see a 30-Watt light bulb, just think: that’s how much power Superman has access to.  If he stores it like a battery, he should be able to lift a 1-ton car a couple of hundred feet into the air once per day, or a major feat (such as the ship he lifted in MOS #2) once every 20 years or so.  Logically, Superman’s batteries should have been depleted after his first week on the job.

 As is becoming increasingly apparent, this is really just a matter of  preference. Some like it more complicated, some less.

In the case of Superman, I’d say the “solar battery” people are squarely in the “less complicated” camp.  Accepting an obviously-false explanation is less scientific than saying, “Kryptonians get superpowers under a yellow sun, and nobody knows why”.

In the case of Spider-Man, I’m torn.  On the face of it, spider venom shouldn’t have any more connections to a spider’s abilities than, say, snake venom.  So why didn’t Peter get snake powers instead?  The whole bit about “it was a spider, therefore you get spider-like powers” does have a hint of sympathetic magic about it.

Frankly, I find it hard to be too worried about it.  As far as I’m concerned, Spider-Man’s origin has nothing to do with how he got his powers — the spider bite is the McGuffin part of the story.  His *real* origin is when he found out who murdered Uncle Ben.