NEWS
Silicon Valley
Solar Cell Production System Could Drive Down Costs
Voice of America
December 12, 2007
By Art Chimes
Solar power would seem to be the ultimate energy source — no pollution,
no greenhouse gases, seemingly unlimited. But, although solar cells have
their uses, they remain a niche product because solar electricity costs
may up to three times more than electricity from coal or other conventional
sources. As Art Chimes reports, a new way of making solar panels may be
changing that, however.
Popular Science magazine is out this month with its annual 'Best of What's
New' issue, showcasing 100 of the year's best innovations, from computers
to spacecraft to cameras. They chose one as their Innovation of the Year,
and it is, potentially, revolutionary.
"This is the innovation that has the potential to really, finally
make solar power feasible, make widespread solar power affordable and
a real viable option to coal and other hydrocarbon-based fuels,"
said Popular Science executive editor Mike Haney.
He's talking about a new way of making thin-film solar cells that can
be likened to printing a newspaper. Instead of rolls of paper, though,
it uses rolls of thin metal foil, and the ink is a liquid form of the
semiconductor material that converts light into electricity. It's all
aimed at reducing costs, says Brian Sager, a co-founder of California-based
Nanosolar, Inc., which developed the process.
"What Nanosolar has done is develop an aggregate of process innovations
that dramatically decrease the cost of using this material, depositing
it much more rapidly, much more efficiently, with much better capital
efficiency as well, and thereby dropping the cost of the solar panels
dramatically," said Sager. "We're aiming for grid parity."
Grid parity means consumers would pay about the same for solar power as
they do now for coal or nuclear. In the United States, that's about 8
to10 cents per kilowatt hour, or about one-third the current price of
electricity from solar cells.
As the company name suggests, its product relies on nanotechnology, which
for some people might be a source of concern, but Sager says, not in this
case.
"There are no nanoparticles in our final device," he explained.
"So we use the nanoparticles as a way to coat this ink onto the foil,
but then when we process it, those particles are attached together in
a continuous film, so there's no longer discrete particles in the final
device, so we don't have any risk of exposure of nanoparticles."
The solar panel foil can be rolled out as roofing material or put on the
sides of buildings in a city.
Sager also imagines land just outside urban areas covered with his solar
energy-collecting powersheets. "And the solar panels are interconnected
to create a certain amount of output, which could be used to power a city.
And this could be done just outside the city so that you minimize the
transmission loss from getting that electricity from the [solar] power
plant to the end users."
Nanosolar has factories in Germany and a big, new one in California, so
economies of scale should make an important difference in the impact of
solar power.
"When they get this San Jose plant online, they're going to create
more megawatts worth of solar cells in a year than every other solar plant
in the U.S. [combined], and that's only one plant," says Popular
Science editor Haney. "So surely once they get that one going, and,
you know, as some of these other companies catch them and develop their
own ways of doing it and start cranking it out, I think- I think the leap
in scale of solar being used is going to be pretty incredible in the next
five to ten years."
Popular Science's choice of Nanosolar solar cells as their Innovation
of the Year came at the end of a year in which the consensus solidified
that greenhouse gases — such as those produced by burning coal and
oil — are warming our planet.
The magazine isn't alone in its enthusiasm for Nanosolar. Google founders
Larry Page and Sergey Brin are among those who have invested in the privately-owned
company. And last month, Google announced a new initiative to help develop
solar and other renewable energy technologies that can deliver city-scale
electric power for less than the cost of electricity from coal.