Heliotactic Press

Interdisciplinary exploration of solar energy conversion, photovoltaics, and integrative design, and scientific philosophy.

Educational Talk on Solar Energy 2009/09/13

Solar hot water systems, and the technologies that make them possible, hold crucial pieces of information relevant to developing advanced photovoltaic systems. For the most part, photovoltaics are still just “flat plate collectors”, collecting thermal heat in addition to electricity. This talk by solar historian, John Perlin, offers an important glimpse of the historical context of solar energy technologies.

Video interview provided by Eon’s Video Blog on bliptv.

Books on solar energy by Perlin:

A Golden Thread: 2500 Years of Solar Architecture and Technology (1980) Ken Butti and John Perlin (foreward by Amory Lovins). Cheshire Books, Palo Alto.

From Space to Earth: The Story of Solar Electricity (1999, 2002) John Perlin. (Aatec Press) Harvard University Press.

 

Educational Links on Photovoltaics and Solar Energy 2009/01/05

Filed under: PV Education,Solar Education — nanomech @ 21:35
Tags: , , , ,

Where would be the best place to get an update of solar energy conversion, and photovoltaics in particular? That would be in a classroom, where you can ask questions and sort through the multiple topics of materials, sources of photovoltaic action (drift, diffusion, electrokinetic phenomena), and the difference between a cell, module, and an array. You would also be able to see that PV is only a tiny segment of an otherwise broad portfolio of technologies to make use of the sun for heating, cooling, making chemicals, making electricity from turbines, and so on. I offer two core courses at Penn State that deal with these subjects, but obviously there is a larger audience out there that would like information. Thankfully, we will be producing a web-based course dealing with photovoltaics, but that will be about a year off.

Therefore, I would recommend two web-based books for the curious, right now! The first is an educational project that began as an international collaboration between the University of Delaware and the University of New South Wales, funded by an IGERT grant. The site is called Photovoltaics: Devices, Systems and Applications CD-ROM, and the authors are Christiana Honsberg and Stuart Bowden. This includes interactive diagrams, movie clips of the silicon manufacture process, and a good review of solar energy. You will need to download Shockwave from Adobe. Up until recently, the Shockwave addition did not work for Macintosh systems, so I was more hesitant at recommending the site. But now: go for it! You will be busy for weeks. Note that the site is dedicated to silicon devices, and will not provide a comprehensive description of thin film PV devices and the principles of operation. That being said, the site is a gem.

The second book is not as web savvy, but does contain fantastic fundamental information on solar energy conversion. The resource is Power from the Sun by by William B. Stine and Michael Geyer, at California State Polytechnic University in the USA and IEA SolarPACES in Spain. This text is more like the classic paper text by John Duffie and William Beckman: Solar Engineering of Thermal Processes,1 in which multiple solar energy conversion technologies are described.

There you go, solar energy enthusiasts! Go to school and get informed on solar energy. But if you are tied up with other things (like life), in the mean time do some winter reading and find out how much potential solar energy has as a sustainable technology!

1. Duffie, J. A.; Beckman, W. A. Solar Engineering of Thermal Processes. (3rd Ed.) 2006 John Wiley & Sons Inc, Hoboken, NJ, USA.

 

 
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