Solar energy is radiant light and heat from the
Sun that is harnessed using a range of ever-evolving technologies such as solar
heating, photovoltaics, solar thermal energy, solar architecture, molten salt
power plants and artificial photosynthesis.[1][2]
It is an important source of renewable energy and
its technologies are broadly characterized as either passive solar or active
solar depending on how they capture and distribute solar energy or convert it
into solar power. Active solar techniques include the use of photovoltaic
systems, concentrated solar power and solar water heating to harness the
energy. Passive solar techniques include orienting a building to the Sun,
selecting materials with favorable thermal mass or light-dispersing properties,
and designing spaces that naturally circulate air.
The large magnitude of solar energy available
makes it a highly appealing source of electricity. The United Nations
Development Programme in its 2000 World Energy Assessment found that the annual
potential of solar energy was 1,575–49,837 exajoules (EJ). This is several
times larger than the total world energy consumption, which was 559.8 EJ in
2012.[3][4]
In 2011, the International Energy Agency said
that "the development of affordable, inexhaustible and clean solar energy
technologies will have huge longer-term benefits. It will increase countries’
energy security through reliance on an indigenous, inexhaustible and mostly
import-independent resource, enhance sustainability, reduce pollution, lower
the costs of mitigating global warming, and keep fossil fuel prices lower than
otherwise. These advantages are global. Hence the additional costs of the
incentives for early deployment should be considered learning investments; they
must be wisely spent and need to be widely shared".[1]he Earth receives
174 petawatts (PW) of incoming solar radiation (insolation) at the upper
atmosphere.[5] Approximately 30% is reflected back to space while the rest is
absorbed by clouds, oceans and land masses. The spectrum of solar light at the
Earth's surface is mostly spread across the visible and near-infrared ranges
with a small part in the near-ultraviolet.[6] Most of the world's population
live in areas with insolation levels of 150–300 watts/m², or 3.5–7.0 kWh/m² per
day.[citation needed]
Solar radiation is absorbed by the Earth's land
surface, oceans – which cover about 71% of the globe – and atmosphere. Warm air
containing evaporated water from the oceans rises, causing atmospheric
circulation or convection. When the air reaches a high altitude, where the
temperature is low, water vapor condenses into clouds, which rain onto the
Earth's surface, completing the water cycle. The latent heat of water
condensation amplifies convection, producing atmospheric phenomena such as wind,
cyclones and anti-cyclones.[7] Sunlight absorbed by the oceans and land masses
keeps the surface at an average temperature of 14 °C.[8] By photosynthesis,
green plants convert solar energy into chemically stored energy, which produces
food, wood and the biomass from which fossil fuels are derived.[9]
The total solar energy absorbed by Earth's
atmosphere, oceans and land masses is approximately 3,850,000 exajoules (EJ)
per year.[10] In 2002, this was more energy in one hour than the world used in
one year.[11][12] Photosynthesis captures approximately 3,000 EJ per year in
biomass.[13] The amount of solar energy reaching the surface of the planet is
so vast that in one year it is about twice as much as will ever be obtained
from all of the Earth's non-renewable resources of coal, oil, natural gas, and
mined uranium combined,[14]
Yearly solar fluxes & human consumption1
Solar 3,850,000 [10]
Wind 2,250 [15]
Biomass potential ~200 [16]
Primary energy use2 539 [17]
Electricity2 ~67 [18]
1 Energy given in Exajoule (EJ) = 1018 J = 278
TWh
2 Consumption as of year 2010
The potential solar energy that could be used by
humans differs from the amount of solar energy present near the surface of the
planet because factors such as geography, time variation, cloud cover, and the
land available to humans limit the amount of solar energy that we can acquire.
Geography affects solar energy potential because
areas that are closer to the equator have a greater amount of solar radiation.
However, the use of photovoltaics that can follow the position of the sun can
significantly increase the solar energy potential in areas that are farther
from the equator.[4] Time variation effects the potential of solar energy
because during the nighttime there is little solar radiation on the surface of
the Earth for solar panels to absorb. This limits the amount of energy that
solar panels can absorb in one day. Cloud cover can affect the potential of
solar panels because clouds block incoming light from the sun and reduce the
light available for solar cells.
In addition, land availability has a large effect
on the available solar energy because solar panels can only be set up on land
that is otherwise unused and suitable for solar panels. Roofs have been found
to be a suitable place for solar cells, as many people have discovered that
they can collect energy directly from their homes this way. Other areas that
are suitable for solar cells are lands that are not being used for businesses
where solar plants can be established.[4]
Solar technologies are characterized as either
passive or active depending on the way they capture, convert and distribute
sunlight and enable solar energy to be harnessed at different levels around the
world, mostly depending on distance from the equator. Although solar energy
refers primarily to the use of solar radiation for practical ends, all
renewable energies, other than Geothermal power and Tidal power, derive their
energy either directly or indirectly from the Sun.
Active solar techniques use photovoltaics, concentrated
solar power, solar thermal collectors, pumps, and fans to convert sunlight into
useful outputs. Passive solar techniques include selecting materials with
favorable thermal properties, designing spaces that naturally circulate air,
and referencing the position of a building to the Sun. Active solar
technologies increase the supply of energy and are considered supply side
technologies, while passive solar technologies reduce the need for alternate
resources and are generally considered demand side technologies.[19]
In 2000, the United Nations Development
Programme, UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs, and World Energy
Council published an estimate of the potential solar energy that could be used
by humans each year that took into account factors such as insolation, cloud
cover, and the land that is usable by humans. The estimate found that solar
energy has a global potential of 1,575–49,837 EJ per year (see table below).[4]
Annual solar energy potential by region
(Exajoules) [4]
Region North
America Latin America and Caribbean Western Europe Central and Eastern Europe Former
Soviet Union Middle East and North
Africa Sub-Saharan Africa Pacific Asia South
Asia Centrally planned Asia Pacific OECD
Minimum 181.1 112.6 25.1 4.5 199.3 412.4 371.9 41.0 38.8 115.5 72.6
Maximum 7,410 3,385 914 154 8,655 11,060 9,528 994 1,339 4,135 2,263
Note:
Total global annual solar energy potential
amounts to 1,575 EJ (minimum) to 49,837 EJ (maximum)
Data reflects assumptions of annual clear sky
irradiance, annual average sky clearance, and available land area. All figures
given in Exajoules.
Quantitative relation of global solar potential
vs. the world's primary energy consumption:
Ratio of potential vs. current consumption (402
EJ) as of year: 3.9 (minimum) to 124 (maximum)
Ratio of potential vs. projected consumption by
2050 (590–1,050 EJ): 1.5–2.7 (minimum) to 47–84 (maximum)
Ratio of potential vs. projected consumption by
2100 (880–1,900 EJ): 0.8–1.8 (minimum) to 26–57 (maximum)
Source: United Nations Development Programme –
World Energy Assessment (2000)[4]
Thermal energy
Main article: Solar thermal energy
Solar thermal technologies can be used for water
heating, space heating, space cooling and process heat generation.[20]
Early commercial adaptation
1917 Patent drawing of Shuman's solar collector
In 1897, Frank Shuman, a U.S. inventor, engineer
and solar energy pioneer built a small demonstration solar engine that worked
by reflecting solar energy onto square boxes filled with ether, which has a
lower boiling point than water, and were fitted internally with black pipes
which in turn powered a steam engine. In 1908 Shuman formed the Sun Power
Company with the intent of building larger solar power plants. He, along with
his technical advisor A.S.E. Ackermann and British physicist Sir Charles Vernon
Boys,[citation needed] developed an improved system using mirrors to reflect
solar energy upon collector boxes, increasing heating capacity to the extent
that water could now be used instead of ether. Shuman then constructed a full-scale
steam engine powered by low-pressure water, enabling him to patent the entire
solar engine system by 1912.
Shuman built the world's first solar thermal
power station in Maadi, Egypt, between 1912 and 1913. His plant used parabolic
troughs to power a 45–52 kilowatts (60–70 hp) engine that pumped more than
22,000 litres (4,800 imp gal; 5,800 US gal) of water per minute from the Nile
River to adjacent cotton fields. Although the outbreak of World War I and the
discovery of cheap oil in the 1930s discouraged the advancement of solar
energy, Shuman's vision and basic design were resurrected in the 1970s with a
new wave of interest in solar thermal energy.[21] In 1916 Shuman was quoted in
the media advocating solar energy's utilization, saying:
We have proved the commercial profit of sun power
in the tropics and have more particularly proved that after our stores of oil
and coal are exhausted the human race can receive unlimited power from the rays
of the sun.
— Frank Shuman, New York Times, 2 July 1916[22]
Water heating
Main articles: Solar hot water and Solar
combisystem
Solar water heaters facing the Sun to maximize
gain
Solar hot water systems use sunlight to heat
water. In low geographical latitudes (below 40 degrees) from 60 to 70% of the
domestic hot water use with temperatures up to 60 °C can be provided by solar
heating systems.[23] The most common types of solar water heaters are evacuated
tube collectors (44%) and glazed flat plate collectors (34%) generally used for
domestic hot water; and unglazed plastic collectors (21%) used mainly to heat
swimming pools.[24]
As of 2007, the total installed capacity of solar
hot water systems was approximately 154 thermal gigawatt (GWth).[25] China is
the world leader in their deployment with 70 GWth installed as of 2006 and a
long-term goal of 210 GWth by 2020.[26] Israel and Cyprus are the per capita
leaders in the use of solar hot water systems with over 90% of homes using
them.[27] In the United States, Canada, and Australia, heating swimming pools
is the dominant application of solar hot water with an installed capacity of 18
GWth as of 2005.[19]
Heating, cooling and ventilation
Main articles: Solar heating, Thermal mass, Solar
chimney, and Solar air conditioning
In the United States, heating, ventilation and
air conditioning (HVAC) systems account for 30% (4.65 EJ/yr) of the energy used
in commercial buildings and nearly 50% (10.1 EJ/yr) of the energy used in
residential buildings.[28][29] Solar heating, cooling and ventilation
technologies can be used to offset a portion of this energy.
MIT's Solar House #1, built in 1939 in the U.S.,
used seasonal thermal energy storage for year-round heating.
Thermal mass is any material that can be used to
store heat—heat from the Sun in the case of solar energy. Common thermal mass
materials include stone, cement and water. Historically they have been used in
arid climates or warm temperate regions to keep buildings cool by absorbing
solar energy during the day and radiating stored heat to the cooler atmosphere
at night. However, they can be used in cold temperate areas to maintain warmth
as well. The size and placement of thermal mass depend on several factors such
as climate, daylighting and shading conditions. When properly incorporated,
thermal mass maintains space temperatures in a comfortable range and reduces
the need for auxiliary heating and cooling equipment.[30]
A solar chimney (or thermal chimney, in this
context) is a passive solar ventilation system composed of a vertical shaft
connecting the interior and exterior of a building. As the chimney warms, the
air inside is heated causing an updraft that pulls air through the building.
Performance can be improved by using glazing and thermal mass materials[31] in
a way that mimics greenhouses.
Deciduous trees and plants have been promoted as
a means of controlling solar heating and cooling. When planted on the southern
side of a building in the northern hemisphere or the northern side in the
southern hemisphere, their leaves provide shade during the summer, while the
bare limbs allow light to pass during the winter.[32] Since bare, leafless
trees shade 1/3 to 1/2 of incident solar radiation, there is a balance between
the benefits of summer shading and the corresponding loss of winter
heating.[33] In climates with significant heating loads, deciduous trees should
not be planted on the Equator-facing side of a building because they will
interfere with winter solar availability. They can, however, be used on the
east and west sides to provide a degree of summer shading without appreciably
affecting winter solar gain.[34]
Cooking
Main article: Solar cooker
Parabolic dish produces steam for cooking, in
Auroville, India
Solar cookers use sunlight for cooking, drying
and pasteurization. They can be grouped into three broad categories: box
cookers, panel cookers and reflector cookers.[35] The simplest solar cooker is
the box cooker first built by Horace de Saussure in 1767.[36] A basic box
cooker consists of an insulated container with a transparent lid. It can be
used effectively with partially overcast skies and will typically reach
temperatures of 90–150 °C (194–302 °F).[37] Panel cookers use a reflective
panel to direct sunlight onto an insulated container and reach temperatures
comparable to box cookers. Reflector cookers use various concentrating
geometries (dish, trough, Fresnel mirrors) to focus light on a cooking
container. These cookers reach temperatures of 315 °C (599 °F) and above but
require direct light to function properly and must be repositioned to track the
Sun.[38]
Process heat
Main articles: Solar pond, Salt evaporation pond,
and Solar furnace
Solar concentrating technologies such as
parabolic dish, trough and Scheffler reflectors can provide process heat for
commercial and industrial applications. The first commercial system was the
Solar Total Energy Project (STEP) in Shenandoah, Georgia, USA where a field of
114 parabolic dishes provided 50% of the process heating, air conditioning and
electrical requirements for a clothing factory. This grid-connected
cogeneration system provided 400 kW of electricity plus thermal energy in the
form of 401 kW steam and 468 kW chilled water, and had a one-hour peak load
thermal storage.[39] Evaporation ponds are shallow pools that concentrate
dissolved solids through evaporation. The use of evaporation ponds to obtain
salt from seawater is one of the oldest applications of solar energy. Modern
uses include concentrating brine solutions used in leach mining and removing
dissolved solids from waste streams.[40] Clothes lines, clotheshorses, and
clothes racks dry clothes through evaporation by wind and sunlight without
consuming electricity or gas. In some states of the United States legislation
protects the "right to dry" clothes.[41] Unglazed transpired
collectors (UTC) are perforated sun-facing walls used for preheating
ventilation air. UTCs can raise the incoming air temperature up to 22 °C (40
°F) and deliver outlet temperatures of 45–60 °C (113–140 °F).[42] The short
payback period of transpired collectors (3 to 12 years) makes them a more
cost-effective alternative than glazed collection systems.[42] As of 2003, over
80 systems with a combined collector area of 35,000 square metres (380,000 sq
ft) had been installed worldwide, including an 860 m2 (9,300 sq ft) collector
in Costa Rica used for drying coffee beans and a 1,300 m2 (14,000 sq ft)
collector in Coimbatore, India, used for drying marigolds.[43]
Water treatment
Main articles: Solar still, Solar water
disinfection, Solar desalination, and Solar Powered Desalination Unit
Solar water disinfection in Indonesia
Solar distillation can be used to make saline or
brackish water potable. The first recorded instance of this was by 16th-century
Arab alchemists.[44] A large-scale solar distillation project was first
constructed in 1872 in the Chilean mining town of Las Salinas.[45] The plant,
which had solar collection area of 4,700 m2 (51,000 sq ft), could produce up to
22,700 L (5,000 imp gal; 6,000 US gal) per day and operate for 40 years.[45]
Individual still designs include single-slope, double-slope (or greenhouse
type), vertical, conical, inverted absorber, multi-wick, and multiple effect.
These stills can operate in passive, active, or hybrid modes. Double-slope
stills are the most economical for decentralized domestic purposes, while
active multiple effect units are more suitable for large-scale applications.[44]
Solar water disinfection (SODIS) involves
exposing water-filled plastic polyethylene terephthalate (PET) bottles to
sunlight for several hours.[46] Exposure times vary depending on weather and
climate from a minimum of six hours to two days during fully overcast
conditions.[47] It is recommended by the World Health Organization as a viable
method for household water treatment and safe storage.[48] Over two million
people in developing countries use this method for their daily drinking
water.[47]
Solar energy may be used in a water stabilization
pond to treat waste water without chemicals or electricity. A further
environmental advantage is that algae grow in such ponds and consume carbon
dioxide in photosynthesis, although algae may produce toxic chemicals that make
the water unusable.[49][50]
Molten salt technology
Molten salt can be employed as a thermal energy
storage method to retain thermal energy collected by a solar tower or solar
trough of a concentrated solar power plant, so that it can be used to generate
electricity in bad weather or at night. It was demonstrated in the Solar Two
project from 1995–1999. The system is predicted to have an annual efficiency of
99%, a reference to the energy retained by storing heat before turning it into
electricity, versus converting heat directly into electricity.[51][52][53] The
molten salt mixtures vary. The most extended mixture contains sodium nitrate,
potassium nitrate and calcium nitrate. It is non-flammable and nontoxic, and
has already been used in the chemical and metals industries as a heat-transport
fluid, so experience with such systems exists in non-solar applications.
The salt melts at 131 °C (268 °F). It is kept
liquid at 288 °C (550 °F) in an insulated "cold" storage tank. The
liquid salt is pumped through panels in a solar collector where the focused sun
heats it to 566 °C (1,051 °F). It is then sent to a hot storage tank. This is
so well insulated that the thermal energy can be usefully stored for up to a
week.[54]
When electricity is needed, the hot salt is
pumped to a conventional steam-generator to produce superheated steam for a
turbine/generator as used in any conventional coal, oil, or nuclear power
plant. A 100-megawatt turbine would need a tank about 9.1 metres (30 ft) tall
and 24 metres (79 ft) in diameter to drive it for four hours by this design.
Several parabolic trough power plants in
Spain[55] and solar power tower developer SolarReserve use this thermal energy
storage concept. The Solana Generating Station in the U.S. has six hours of
storage by molten salt. The María Elena plant[56] is a 400 MW thermo-solar
complex in the northern Chilean region of Antofagasta employing molten salt
technology.
Electricity production
Main article: Solar power
Some of the world's largest solar power stations:
Ivanpah (CSP) and Topaz (PV)
Solar power is the conversion of sunlight into
electricity, either directly using photovoltaics (PV), or indirectly using
concentrated solar power (CSP). CSP systems use lenses or mirrors and tracking
systems to focus a large area of sunlight into a small beam. PV converts light
into electric current using the photoelectric effect.
Solar power is anticipated to become the world's
largest source of electricity by 2050, with solar photovoltaics and
concentrated solar power contributing 16 and 11 percent to the global overall
consumption, respectively.[57] In 2016, after another year of rapid growth,
solar generated 1.3% of global power.[58]
Commercial concentrated solar power plants were
first developed in the 1980s. The 392 MW Ivanpah Solar Power Facility, in the
Mojave Desert of California, is the largest solar power plant in the world.
Other large concentrated solar power plants include the 150 MW Solnova Solar
Power Station and the 100 MW Andasol solar power station, both in Spain. The
250 MW Agua Caliente Solar Project, in the United States, and the 221 MW
Charanka Solar Park in India, are the world's largest photovoltaic plants.
Solar projects exceeding 1 GW are being developed, but most of the deployed
photovoltaics are in small rooftop arrays of less than 5 kW, which are
connected to the grid using net metering and/or a feed-in tariff.[59]
Photovoltaics
Main article: Photovoltaics
50,000100,000150,000200,000200620102014
Desc-i.svg
Europe Asia-Pacific Americas China
Middle
East and Africa
Worldwide growth of PV capacity grouped by region
in MW (2006–2014)
In the last two decades, photovoltaics (PV), also
known as solar PV, has evolved from a pure niche market of small scale
applications towards becoming a mainstream electricity source. A solar cell is
a device that converts light directly into electricity using the photoelectric
effect. The first solar cell was constructed by Charles Fritts in the
1880s.[60] In 1931 a German engineer, Dr Bruno Lange, developed a photo cell
using silver selenide in place of copper oxide.[61] Although the prototype
selenium cells converted less than 1% of incident light into electricity, both
Ernst Werner von Siemens and James Clerk Maxwell recognized the importance of
this discovery.[62] Following the work of Russell Ohl in the 1940s, researchers
Gerald Pearson, Calvin Fuller and Daryl Chapin created the crystalline silicon
solar cell in 1954.[63] These early solar cells cost 286 USD/watt and reached
efficiencies of 4.5–6%.[64] By 2012 available efficiencies exceeded 20%, and
the maximum efficiency of research photovoltaics was in excess of 40%.[65]
Concentrated solar power
See also: Concentrated solar power
Concentrating Solar Power (CSP) systems use
lenses or mirrors and tracking systems to focus a large area of sunlight into a
small beam. The concentrated heat is then used as a heat source for a
conventional power plant. A wide range of concentrating technologies exists;
the most developed are the parabolic trough, the concentrating linear fresnel
reflector, the Stirling dish and the solar power tower. Various techniques are used
to track the Sun and focus light. In all of these systems a working fluid is
heated by the concentrated sunlight, and is then used for power generation or
energy storage.[66]
Architecture and urban planning
Main articles: Passive solar building design and
Urban heat island
Darmstadt University of Technology, Germany, won
the 2007 Solar Decathlon in Washington, D.C. with this passive house designed
for humid and hot subtropical climate.[67]
Sunlight has influenced building design since the
beginning of architectural history.[68] Advanced solar architecture and urban
planning methods were first employed by the Greeks and Chinese, who oriented
their buildings toward the south to provide light and warmth.[69]
The common features of passive solar architecture
are orientation relative to the Sun, compact proportion (a low surface area to
volume ratio), selective shading (overhangs) and thermal mass.[68] When these
features are tailored to the local climate and environment they can produce
well-lit spaces that stay in a comfortable temperature range. Socrates' Megaron
House is a classic example of passive solar design.[68] The most recent
approaches to solar design use computer modeling tying together solar lighting,
heating and ventilation systems in an integrated solar design package.[70]
Active solar equipment such as pumps, fans and switchable windows can
complement passive design and improve system performance.
Urban heat islands (UHI) are metropolitan areas
with higher temperatures than that of the surrounding environment. The higher
temperatures result from increased absorption of solar energy by urban
materials such as asphalt and concrete, which have lower albedos and higher
heat capacities than those in the natural environment. A straightforward method
of counteracting the UHI effect is to paint buildings and roads white, and to
plant trees in the area. Using these methods, a hypothetical "cool
communities" program in Los Angeles has projected that urban temperatures
could be reduced by approximately 3 °C at an estimated cost of US$1 billion,
giving estimated total annual benefits of US$530 million from reduced
air-conditioning costs and healthcare savings.[71]
Agriculture and horticulture
Greenhouses like these in the Westland
municipality of the Netherlands grow vegetables, fruits and flowers.
Agriculture and horticulture seek to optimize the
capture of solar energy in order to optimize the productivity of plants.
Techniques such as timed planting cycles, tailored row orientation, staggered
heights between rows and the mixing of plant varieties can improve crop
yields.[72][73] While sunlight is generally considered a plentiful resource,
the exceptions highlight the importance of solar energy to agriculture. During
the short growing seasons of the Little Ice Age, French and English farmers
employed fruit walls to maximize the collection of solar energy. These walls
acted as thermal masses and accelerated ripening by keeping plants warm. Early
fruit walls were built perpendicular to the ground and facing south, but over
time, sloping walls were developed to make better use of sunlight. In 1699,
Nicolas Fatio de Duillier even suggested using a tracking mechanism which could
pivot to follow the Sun.[74] Applications of solar energy in agriculture aside
from growing crops include pumping water, drying crops, brooding chicks and
drying chicken manure.[43][75] More recently the technology has been embraced
by vintners, who use the energy generated by solar panels to power grape
presses.[76]
Greenhouses convert solar light to heat, enabling
year-round production and the growth (in enclosed environments) of specialty
crops and other plants not naturally suited to the local climate. Primitive
greenhouses were first used during Roman times to produce cucumbers year-round
for the Roman emperor Tiberius.[77] The first modern greenhouses were built in
Europe in the 16th century to keep exotic plants brought back from explorations
abroad.[78] Greenhouses remain an important part of horticulture today, and
plastic transparent materials have also been used to similar effect in
polytunnels and row covers.
Transport
Main articles: Solar vehicle, Solar-charged
vehicle, Electric boat, and Solar balloon
Winner of the 2013 World Solar Challenge in
Australia
Solar electric aircraft circumnavigating the
globe in 2015
Development of a solar-powered car has been an
engineering goal since the 1980s. The World Solar Challenge is a biannual
solar-powered car race, where teams from universities and enterprises compete
over 3,021 kilometres (1,877 mi) across central Australia from Darwin to
Adelaide. In 1987, when it was founded, the winner's average speed was 67
kilometres per hour (42 mph) and by 2007 the winner's average speed had
improved to 90.87 kilometres per hour (56.46 mph).[79] The North American Solar
Challenge and the planned South African Solar Challenge are comparable
competitions that reflect an international interest in the engineering and
development of solar powered vehicles.[80][81]
Some vehicles use solar panels for auxiliary
power, such as for air conditioning, to keep the interior cool, thus reducing
fuel consumption.[82][83]
In 1975, the first practical solar boat was
constructed in England.[84] By 1995, passenger boats incorporating PV panels
began appearing and are now used extensively.[85] In 1996, Kenichi Horie made
the first solar-powered crossing of the Pacific Ocean, and the Sun21 catamaran
made the first solar-powered crossing of the Atlantic Ocean in the winter of
2006–2007.[86] There were plans to circumnavigate the globe in 2010.[87]
In 1974, the unmanned AstroFlight Sunrise
airplane made the first solar flight. On 29 April 1979, the Solar Riser made
the first flight in a solar-powered, fully controlled, man-carrying flying
machine, reaching an altitude of 40 ft (12 m). In 1980, the Gossamer Penguin
made the first piloted flights powered solely by photovoltaics. This was
quickly followed by the Solar Challenger which crossed the English Channel in
July 1981. In 1990 Eric Scott Raymond in 21 hops flew from California to North
Carolina using solar power.[88] Developments then turned back to unmanned
aerial vehicles (UAV) with the Pathfinder (1997) and subsequent designs,
culminating in the Helios which set the altitude record for a
non-rocket-propelled aircraft at 29,524 metres (96,864 ft) in 2001.[89] The
Zephyr, developed by BAE Systems, is the latest in a line of record-breaking
solar aircraft, making a 54-hour flight in 2007, and month-long flights were
envisioned by 2010.[90] As of 2016, Solar Impulse, an electric aircraft, is
currently circumnavigating the globe. It is a single-seat plane powered by
solar cells and capable of taking off under its own power. The design allows
the aircraft to remain airborne for several days.[91]
A solar balloon is a black balloon that is filled
with ordinary air. As sunlight shines on the balloon, the air inside is heated
and expands causing an upward buoyancy force, much like an artificially heated
hot air balloon. Some solar balloons are large enough for human flight, but
usage is generally limited to the toy market as the surface-area to
payload-weight ratio is relatively high.[92]
Fuel production
Concentrated solar panels are getting a power
boost. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) will be testing a new
concentrated solar power system – one that can help natural gas power plants
reduce their fuel usage by up to 20 percent.
Main articles: Solar chemical, Solar fuel, and
Artificial photosynthesis
Solar chemical processes use solar energy to
drive chemical reactions. These processes offset energy that would otherwise
come from a fossil fuel source and can also convert solar energy into storable
and transportable fuels. Solar induced chemical reactions can be divided into
thermochemical or photochemical.[93] A variety of fuels can be produced by
artificial photosynthesis.[94] The multielectron catalytic chemistry involved
in making carbon-based fuels (such as methanol) from reduction of carbon dioxide
is challenging; a feasible alternative is hydrogen production from protons,
though use of water as the source of electrons (as plants do) requires
mastering the multielectron oxidation of two water molecules to molecular
oxygen.[95] Some have envisaged working solar fuel plants in coastal
metropolitan areas by 2050 – the splitting of sea water providing hydrogen to
be run through adjacent fuel-cell electric power plants and the pure water
by-product going directly into the municipal water system.[96] Another vision
involves all human structures covering the earth's surface (i.e., roads,
vehicles and buildings) doing photosynthesis more efficiently than plants.[97]
Hydrogen production technologies have been a
significant area of solar chemical research since the 1970s. Aside from
electrolysis driven by photovoltaic or photochemical cells, several
thermochemical processes have also been explored. One such route uses
concentrators to split water into oxygen and hydrogen at high temperatures
(2,300–2,600 °C or 4,200–4,700 °F).[98] Another approach uses the heat from
solar concentrators to drive the steam reformation of natural gas thereby
increasing the overall hydrogen yield compared to conventional reforming
methods.[99] Thermochemical cycles characterized by the decomposition and
regeneration of reactants present another avenue for hydrogen production. The
Solzinc process under development at the Weizmann Institute of Science uses a 1
MW solar furnace to decompose zinc oxide (ZnO) at temperatures above 1,200 °C
(2,200 °F). This initial reaction produces pure zinc, which can subsequently be
reacted with water to produce hydrogen.[100]
Energy storage methods
Main articles: Energy storage, Seasonal thermal
energy storage, Phase change material, Grid energy storage, and V2G
Thermal energy storage. The Andasol CSP plant
uses tanks of molten salt to store solar energy.
Thermal mass systems can store solar energy in
the form of heat at domestically useful temperatures for daily or interseasonal
durations. Thermal storage systems generally use readily available materials
with high specific heat capacities such as water, earth and stone.
Well-designed systems can lower peak demand, shift time-of-use to off-peak
hours and reduce overall heating and cooling requirements.[101][102]
Phase change materials such as paraffin wax and
Glauber's salt are another thermal storage medium. These materials are
inexpensive, readily available, and can deliver domestically useful
temperatures (approximately 64 °C or 147 °F). The "Dover House" (in
Dover, Massachusetts) was the first to use a Glauber's salt heating system, in
1948.[103] Solar energy can also be stored at high temperatures using molten
salts. Salts are an effective storage medium because they are low-cost, have a
high specific heat capacity and can deliver heat at temperatures compatible
with conventional power systems. The Solar Two project used this method of
energy storage, allowing it to store 1.44 terajoules (400,000 kWh) in its 68 m³
storage tank with an annual storage efficiency of about 99%.[104]
Off-grid PV systems have traditionally used
rechargeable batteries to store excess electricity. With grid-tied systems,
excess electricity can be sent to the transmission grid, while standard grid
electricity can be used to meet shortfalls. Net metering programs give
household systems a credit for any electricity they deliver to the grid. This
is handled by 'rolling back' the meter whenever the home produces more
electricity than it consumes. If the net electricity use is below zero, the
utility then rolls over the kilowatt hour credit to the next month.[105] Other
approaches involve the use of two meters, to measure electricity consumed vs.
electricity produced. This is less common due to the increased installation
cost of the second meter. Most standard meters accurately measure in both
directions, making a second meter unnecessary.
Pumped-storage hydroelectricity stores energy in
the form of water pumped when energy is available from a lower elevation
reservoir to a higher elevation one. The energy is recovered when demand is
high by releasing the water, with the pump becoming a hydroelectric power
generator.[106]
Development, deployment and economics
Participants in a workshop on sustainable
development inspect solar panels at Monterrey Institute of Technology and
Higher Education, Mexico City on top of a building on campus.
Main article: Deployment of solar power to energy
grids
See also: Cost of electricity by source and
Renewable energy by country
Beginning with the surge in coal use which
accompanied the Industrial Revolution, energy consumption has steadily
transitioned from wood and biomass to fossil fuels. The early development of
solar technologies starting in the 1860s was driven by an expectation that coal
would soon become scarce. However, development of solar technologies stagnated
in the early 20th century in the face of the increasing availability, economy,
and utility of coal and petroleum.[107]
The 1973 oil embargo and 1979 energy crisis
caused a reorganization of energy policies around the world and brought renewed
attention to developing solar technologies.[108][109] Deployment strategies
focused on incentive programs such as the Federal Photovoltaic Utilization
Program in the U.S. and the Sunshine Program in Japan. Other efforts included
the formation of research facilities in the U.S. (SERI, now NREL), Japan
(NEDO), and Germany (Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems ISE).[110]
Commercial solar water heaters began appearing in
the United States in the 1890s.[111] These systems saw increasing use until the
1920s but were gradually replaced by cheaper and more reliable heating
fuels.[112] As with photovoltaics, solar water heating attracted renewed
attention as a result of the oil crises in the 1970s but interest subsided in
the 1980s due to falling petroleum prices. Development in the solar water
heating sector progressed steadily throughout the 1990s and annual growth rates
have averaged 20% since 1999.[25] Although generally underestimated, solar water
heating and cooling is by far the most widely deployed solar technology with an
estimated capacity of 154 GW as of 2007.[25]
The International Energy Agency has said that
solar energy can make considerable contributions to solving some of the most
urgent problems the world now faces:[1]
The development of affordable, inexhaustible and
clean solar energy technologies will have huge longer-term benefits. It will
increase countries’ energy security through reliance on an indigenous, inexhaustible
and mostly import-independent resource, enhance sustainability, reduce
pollution, lower the costs of mitigating climate change, and keep fossil fuel
prices lower than otherwise. These advantages are global. Hence the additional
costs of the incentives for early deployment should be considered learning
investments; they must be wisely spent and need to be widely shared.[1]
In 2011, a report by the International Energy
Agency found that solar energy technologies such as photovoltaics, solar hot water
and concentrated solar power could provide a third of the world's energy by
2060 if politicians commit to limiting climate change. The energy from the sun
could play a key role in de-carbonizing the global economy alongside
improvements in energy efficiency and imposing costs on greenhouse gas
emitters. "The strength of solar is the incredible variety and flexibility
of applications, from small scale to big scale".[113]
We have proved ... that after our stores of oil
and coal are exhausted the human race can receive unlimited power from the rays
of the sun.
— Frank Shuman, New York Times, 2 July 1916[22]
ISO standards
The International Organization for
Standardization has established several standards relating to solar energy
equipment. For example, ISO 9050 relates to glass in building while ISO 10217
relates to the materials used in solar water heaters.
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