NREL Develops Switchable Solar Window
EDITOR’S NOTE: Here is yet another example of a federal program that is working on practical solutions to our future energy needs that is gravely endangered by the warped priorities of Donald Trump and the Republican-controlled Congress.
If Trump minions kill this program and its work, you can pretty much count on other countries to take it over, exploiting the market and the jobs. For example, the Japanese are working on solar windows research. CLICK HERE. – W. Collette
Demonstration device dynamically
responds to sunlight by transforming from transparent to tinted while
converting sunlight into electricity
Thermochromic windows capable of
converting sunlight into electricity at a high efficiency have been developed
by scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy
Laboratory (NREL).
Relying on such advanced materials
as perovskites and single-walled carbon nanotubes, the new technology responds
to heat by transforming from transparent to tinted. As the window darkens, it
generates electricity.
The color change is driven by
molecules (methylamine) that are reversibly absorbed into the device. When solar
energy heats up the device, the molecules are driven out, and the device is
darkened.
When the sun is not shining, the
device is cooled back down, and the molecules re-absorb into the window device,
which then appears transparent.
A video showing the device switch can be seen here Video.
A video showing the device switch can be seen here Video.
The NREL-developed demonstration device allows an average of 68 percent of light in the visible portion of the solar spectrum to pass through when it’s in a transparent, or bleached, state.
When the window changes color—a
process that took about 3 minutes of illumination during testing—only 3 percent
is allowed through the window.
Existing solar window technologies
are static, which means they are designed to harness a fraction of the sunlight
without sacrificing too much visible light transmission needed for viewing or
the comfort of building occupants.
“There is a fundamental tradeoff
between a good window and a good solar cell,” said Lance Wheeler, a scientist
at NREL. “This technology bypasses that. We have a good solar cell when there’s
lots of sunshine and we have a good window when there’s not.”
The proof-of-concept paper published
in Nature Communications established a solar power conversion efficiency of
11.3 percent. “There are thermochromic technologies out there but nothing that
actually converts that energy into electricity,” Wheeler said.
He is the lead author of the paper,
“Switchable Photovoltaic Windows Enabled by Reversible Photothermal Complex
Dissociation from Methylammonium Lead Iodide.”
His co-authors, all from NREL, are
David Moore, Rachelle Ihly, Noah Stanton, Elisa Miller, Robert Tenent, Jeffrey
Blackburn, and Nathan Neale.
In testing under 1-sun illumination,
the 1-square-centimeter demonstration device cycled through repeated
transparent-tinted cycles, but the performance declined over the course of 20
cycles due to restructuring of the switchable layer. Ongoing research is
focused on improving cycle stability.
The path to commercialization of the
technology was explored last year during a two-month program called Energy I-Corps.
Teams of researchers are paired with
industry mentors to learn what customers want of the technology and develop
viable ways to reach the marketplace.
Lance Wheeler and Robert Tenent, the
program lead for window technology at NREL and co-author on the paper, teamed
up to develop a market strategy for a product they called SwitchGlaze.
The effort was funded by the
Emerging Technologies program within the Department of Energy's Building Technologies Office.
Wheeler said the technology could be
integrated into vehicles, buildings, and beyond. The electricity generated by
the solar cell window could charge batteries to power smartphones or on-board electronics
such as fans, rain sensors, and motors that would open or close the windows as
programmed.
NREL is the U.S. Department of
Energy's primary national laboratory for renewable energy and energy efficiency
research and development. NREL is operated for the Energy Department by The
Alliance for Sustainable Energy, LLC.