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  • Solar panels are an incredible innovation in energy tech, but theyre way less efficient

  • than they could be, because they have a problem: heat.

  • Specifically, waste heat, or energy that’s lost while converting the sun’s energy into

  • electricity.

  • But a new technologymade possible by carbon nanotubesmay be just the thing that brings

  • solar panels into the lead for energy technologies.

  • Which would be sweet.

  • In brief, a solar panel works like this: the solar cell is made of a semiconducting material,

  • like silicon, that’s had some other, differently-charged elements added to create an internal electric

  • field.

  • When photons from the sun bounce down and hit the solar panel, they knock electrons

  • off the silicon atoms, and those electrons can then be pulled into an external circuit

  • as electricity.

  • So there ya go, sunshine into power.

  • But not all of the sun’s rays that touch a solar panel get turned into electricity,

  • and this is because not all light is created equal.

  • Electromagnetic radiation, of which visible light is a part, is a spectrum of many different

  • wavelengths, and only certain-wavelength photons carry the right amount of energy to knock

  • electrons loose.

  • For the rest of the wavelengths that can’t displace electrons, that energy is lost, unable

  • to be used in a solar panel to generate electricity.

  • We can actually lose about 70% of the electromagnetic radiation that hits a solar cell because of

  • this mismatch in energy levels!

  • This is one of the biggest issues facing solar panel efficiency.

  • And this, paired with other long-standing problemslike the resistance that electrons

  • face when passing through conducting materialsmakes scientists think that in the future, even

  • with improvements to the existing tech, were looking at a maximum,

  • peak efficiency of solar panels at 29%.

  • Which still seems pretty low, to be honest.

  • I mean come on, sunlight is freesurely something can be done about this.

  • Well, one rescuer comes in a surprisingly tiny package.

  • Researchers at Rice University are adding a film of carbon nanotubes.

  • When looking at why solar panels lose so much energy, the researchers behind this new tech

  • saw that the radiation from the sun that couldn’t be absorbed by the solar panels was bouncing

  • off as heatand they wanted to harness it.

  • But how to turn that heat into electricity?

  • Thermal radiation, like the kind released by solar cells is broadbandwhich is kinda messy.

  • Converting sunlight into electricity is only efficient if the emissions are in a pretty

  • narrow band, nice and precise.

  • So the researchers created wafer-thin films of carbon nanotubes that can absorb that broadband

  • waste heat and channel it into narrow bandwidth photons that can be easily converted to electricity.

  • So instead of going from heat to electricity, the nanotube film makes the conversion process

  • more efficient by taking that energy from heat to light to electricity.

  • Nanotube film is a perfect material for this because it can withstand temperatures up to

  • 1,700 degrees Celsius, so it’s not going to buckle under the heat.

  • And this is huge.

  • It doesn’t require a change to the fundamental makeup of solar panels, so its minimally disruptive

  • to existing solar infrastructure.

  • And the researchers say that their tech could theoretically increase the efficiency of solar

  • panels from that measly 29% efficiency maximum....all the way up to 80%.

  • We live in a world where were gravitating more and more towards renewable energy, and

  • we NEED to.

  • But solar energy, this hugely untapped energetic resource, currently only produces around 2%

  • of the world’s electricity.

  • Potentially huge leaps in solar panel efficiency could make so much more of the sun’s energy

  • available for use.

  • The project is still in the prototyping phase and is a ways out from being used in existing

  • technologies, but if its promises come to fruition... it could change the way we think

  • about the future of our energy grid, and how efficiently we can power the world with clean energy.

  • Big news.

  • If you want even more on how solar panels are adapting into the future, check out this video

  • over here on solar cells powered by bacteria.

  • And subscribe to Seeker for energy tech updates as they break.

  • Let us know what other energy developments you’d like to see us cover down in the comments

  • below and as always, thanks for watching.

Solar panels are an incredible innovation in energy tech, but theyre way less efficient

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