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Any one know ....
How many W/m2 can solar panels produce, assuming concentrated or laser light? The application I was thinking of was for a Solar Power station at Earth - Moon L1, beaming laser power to vehicles on the moon's surface. I think a mechanical digger or large dump truck might need about 100 KW. Alternatively, could the laser be converted directly into heat to drive a closed cycle engine? For these slow moving vehicles, tracking should not be a problem. The other application is reducing solar cell area by preconcentrating light on it, since mirrors are lighter and cheaper than solar cells. Alex |
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In article ,
Alex Terrell wrote: How many W/m2 can solar panels produce, assuming concentrated or laser light? Nobody has done much work on optimizing solar panels for laser illumination, so I think the answer to that one is "nobody knows". Solar-concentrator systems are still somewhat experimental. (Note that you have to do the concentration near the array -- it is fundamentally impossible to concentrate sunlight into a narrow beam for long-range transmission.) My impression is that currently feasible concentration factors are relatively small, but I haven't followed this closely. Do note that the better concentrator arrays generally have to be aimed quite carefully at the light source -- they don't have the wide-angle reception of a normal solar array. ...Alternatively, could the laser be converted directly into heat to drive a closed cycle engine? Converting the laser beam into heat is no big deal in priniciple, but then you run into the inefficiency of heat engines, and the need to get rid of a lot of waste heat with a radiator system. Solar arrays are easier. -- MOST launched 30 June; science observations running | Henry Spencer since Oct; first surprises seen; papers pending. | |
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In article ,
Alex Terrell wrote: Converting the laser beam into heat is no big deal in priniciple, but then you run into the inefficiency of heat engines, and the need to get rid of a lot of waste heat with a radiator system. Solar arrays are easier. I agree solar arrays are easier, but you have 20% efficiency of the array and 90% efficiency of the motor = 18%... Note that for a well-chosen laser wavelength, the conversion efficiency of simple solar cells is 50%+. The reason the efficiencies are so cruddy when working from sunlight is the huge spread of photon energies. -- MOST launched 30 June; science observations running | Henry Spencer since Oct; first surprises seen; papers pending. | |
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![]() "Zoltan Szakaly" wrote in message om... You guys can more efficiently transmit energy using microwave antennas. You can get 60% efficiency by radiating microwaves onto an antenna that is equipped with microwave diodes. This would be the preferred method of transmitting power. Japanese have done most of the latest research work in WPT, and IIRC they have achieved efficiencies in excess of 80%. ( sites to check: http://global.mitsubishielectric.com...r/sol01_b.html and http://www.wronkiewicz.net/ssp/) But, wrt solar cells, check out this http://www.spacedaily.com/news/solarcell-02m.html "An Unexpected Discovery Could Yield A Full Spectrum Solar Cell" "The serendipitous discovery means that a single system of alloys incorporating indium, gallium, and nitrogen can convert virtually the full spectrum of sunlight -- from the near infrared to the far ultraviolet -- to electrical current." "great many layers with only small differences in their band gaps could be stacked to approach the maximum theoretical efficiency of better than 70 percent." -kert |
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(Zoltan Szakaly) wrote in message . com...
(George) wrote in message . com... (Alex Terrell) wrote in message . com... Any one know .... How many W/m2 can solar panels produce, assuming concentrated or laser light? The application I was thinking of was for a Solar Power station at Earth - Moon L1, beaming laser power to vehicles on the moon's surface. I think a mechanical digger or large dump truck might need about 100 KW. Alternatively, could the laser be converted directly into heat to drive a closed cycle engine? For these slow moving vehicles, tracking should not be a problem. The other application is reducing solar cell area by preconcentrating light on it, since mirrors are lighter and cheaper than solar cells. Alex A solar panel converts roughly 7-17% of the light it recieves into electricity. This depends on heat and the cells themselves. For example a silicon PV cell loses half its efficiency between 0 C and room temp. Basically, of the light hitting the solar panel, about 50-60% gets absorbed with about 5-15% getting converted to electricity and 40-50% getting converted to heat, so concentrating the light means more wattage hits the panel so more electricity gets generated, but it also heats up the panel lowering efficiency. I don't know the wattage of concentrated light, but for a laser, assuming you can put big enough panels to collect 90% of the light from it, a 100 KW laser (should be available soon using diode pumped lasers, so no fuel) you would get 90 KW hitting the panels, so you would generate 6-15 KW of electric power but about 38.7 KW of heat. That is a lot of heat you have to disapate. You also need to store some of that electric power as most 100 KW lasers are pulsed (I don't really know of one that isn't), so your actual throughput is less. I don't know much about solar thermal solutions but that may be better (using the laser to heat a convective fluid to run a turbogenerator). You guys can more efficiently transmit energy using microwave antennas. You can get 60% efficiency by radiating microwaves onto an antenna that is equipped with microwave diodes. This would be the preferred method of transmitting power. Zoltan I agree for tranmission to large fixed rectennas, but the specific application is to power vehicles on the moon from L1, so a tight beam is needed. Actually I thought Rectennas were closer to 90% efficient. |
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In article ,
Zoltan Szakaly wrote: You guys can more efficiently transmit energy using microwave antennas. You can get 60% efficiency by radiating microwaves onto an antenna that is equipped with microwave diodes. Better than that, actually. Unfortunately, microwaves lose badly for long-range transmission except at very high power with very large receiving antennas. The longer wavelength -- five orders of magnitude longer than light -- means it's much harder to form tight beams. So you end up having to use very large antennas on both ends, and that's just not practical unless you're sending a whole lot of power. Note that solar arrays are 50%+ efficient on laser light, if the wavelength is chosen carefully to match the solar cells. -- MOST launched 30 June; science observations running | Henry Spencer since Oct; first surprises seen; papers pending. | |
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