• Weekly Intelligence Brief: March 01 - 08
    This week’s WindEnergyUpdate news roundup includes:  RenewableUK calls for extension of UK’s Renewables Obligation; Sinovel and China’s inaugural national offshore wind project; U.S. senators call for ‘Buy America’ clause in the Clean Energy MTC; Iberdrola Renovables creates offshore wind division; U.S.read more […]
  • NREL and Great Lakes WIND target midsized turbine designers and manufacturers
    The U.S. DOE and NREL have launched the Midsize Wind Turbine Development Project to help close the existing technology gap and facilitate development and commercialization of midsize wind turbines. The Laboratory is sponsoring workshops in Ohio and Oklahoma, facilitated by Cleveland-based Great Lakes Wind Network, to build awareness of the DOE-NREL Midsize W […]
  • The Advantages of Residential Wind Power & Wind Turbines – What are YOU Missing Out on?
    Residential Wind Power is an excellent means of generating electricity. Currently solar power and wind power are becoming extremely popular all over the world due to the costs of installation being so low and how effective home made energy is. Residential Wind Power is capable of providing results that will have your full satisfaction and it offers the possi […]

Archive for the ‘Education’ Category

The Truth Behind Wind Turbine Cost

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

Today our economy pressures everyone to cut costs. One way of achieving this has been in the area of homemade energy. A closer look at some home energy options will enlighten the interested party to some sobering facts. One such fact is the truth behind wind turbine cost.

When thinking in terms of cutting cost, we tend to fall back on what we believed in the past decade, still relying on those facts to be true and up to date. When in truth, with a technological explosion like the world has never seen, last weeks information could already be out of date today.

The truth behind wind turbine cost is that, while one would think it is going up (as with most all other areas of necessity in running and keeping a home), it is in fact, going down. The cost since wind utility turbines were first installed had dropped by 80%. This is great news when the price of most everything else in this world seems to be sky rocketing. Yet even with something so promising as cheaper homemade energy, there are some things that still need careful consideration.

I’m sure you have seen many of the little rotating wind-catchers atop homes and businesses around your town. But how much saving are they really producing? One thing that cannot be denied is that, if you put the biggest home made energy wind turbine allowed on your roof, it is still going to be small. Therefore, it can only catch so much wind. Then there is the yearly wind factor to think about. Is this home or business in a place that has a good average of wind speed per year? Frequent storms are not a reliable way to look at this. It must be averaged out on a yearly basis.

Remember, the bigger the wind turbine, the more power it can produce. Unfortunately the rooftop of a home can only hold small ones. It may still be helpful though, just do your math before paying the cost of installation.

Other questions in searching for the truth behind wind turbine cost, are in the area of wind turbine farms. Again size is important. Naturally a bigger farm will have a bigger power output. There are at least four main factors in determining the cost of power from a wind turbine farm:

(1). Size of the farm – bigger farm, bigger output

(2). Wind Speed – More wind caught, more power produced

(3). Cost of Installation – Higher installation cost, Lower savings

(4). Distance to transport power – Longer distance, higher cost

So you can see that the truth behind wind turbine cost can only be found through finding out the facts about the technology, and then applying those facts to your particular situation. Homemade energy is more sought after today than is years past, and the demand for home made energy resources is at an all-time high. Driving down the cost of home energy has become one of the top economic priorities for homeowners in America today.

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How a Solar Cell Works

Sunday, February 15th, 2009
A solar cell is a device which changes sunlight into electricity. A more technical term for a solar cell is a photovoltaic cell.

The term “photo” derives from the Greek word for “light,” and the term “voltaic” comes from the word “volt” which means “electrical force.” A “cell” is a small receptacle or container containing electrodes which generate power.

Thus, a photovoltaic cell is a container that creates electric force, through light.

Whereas a solar cell can generate electricity from any light source, its intended use is the collection of solar energy from the sun.

How a Solar Cell Works

The solar cell works as follows:

Photons (which are particles of light in sun rays) hit the surface of the solar cell and are absorbed a semiconductor, such as silicon.

These photons (bits of sunlight) knock electrons loose from the atoms inside the semiconductor. The photons then push the electrons along, leaving a “gap” in the atom. Another electron is then pulled from an adjacent atom to fill the gap. And so an electrical flow is generated.

The simplicity of this is that one atom has an extra electron, and the other atom is missing one. This is referred to as a “difference in potential.” Nature, wanting to remain balanced, tries to even things out by pulling another electron from the neighboring atom.

A solar panel is comprised of a group of solar cells which are linked together to produce the desired amount of electrical energy.

A group of solar cells linked together can also be referred to as a “module.” Thus the terms “solar panel,” and “solar module,” are synonymous to each other, and essentially mean the exact same thing. “Solar panel” is the more common term, and “solar module” is the technical term.

One can use solar panels individually or one can link several together in order to generate more electricity. When a group of solar panels are linked together, it is called a “solar array”. The more solar panels are included in a solar array, the more power they produce.

Solar Power is a clean and virtually unlimited source of energy. I say “virtually unlimited” because the sun itself won’t last forever. But we won’t have to worry about that for the next few billion years.

Since solar power is a clean energy source which has been around for decades, one might wonder why its not used more. The answer to this lies partially in the cost of producing solar panels, as well as in the efficiency of the solar panels.

We are currently in the second generation of solar panel technology and verging on the third. A lot has changed since the first generation. Solar panels a are becoming a viable source of clean energy.

The solar cells of earlier times were relatively large and bulky compared to our current models. In view of the amount of energy and material required to produce them, and the amount of energy they actually produced, it was more costly to use solar energy than to use fossil fuels. The only exception was in places where little or no fossil fuels were available, such as in space.

With the second-generation solar cells, we attempted to tackle this exact problem. We attempted improve manufacturing techniques so as to reduce the costs, materials and energy needed for the production of solar cells.

Recently, major advances have been made in the production of solar cells, which have reduced production costs.

One contribution in this area was the development of techniques to coat glass or ceramic materials with very thin layers of semi-conductive substances. This made it possible to produce solar panels using only a fraction of the semi-conductive material that was required earlier. The production of solar panels using this second-generation technology is referred to as “Thin Film Technology.”

Third-generation solar energy technologies are currently being researched and developed. The objective is to improve the power of solar cells even further (while keeping production costs to a minimum) in which case thirty to sixty percent of the sunlight hitting the panels will be converted into electricity. (Currently, solar panels convert only about twenty percent.)

But regardless of third generation solar technology, the second-generation solar cell is efficient enough to make solar technology viable – and a host of new solar-powered products have hit the consumer market.

Solar-powered calculators have been in use for a while now, we’ve all seen them. We have even seen a few other novelty devices. But only in the last few years have solar devices come into serious and practical use.

The last two years in particular have seen a virtual explosion of solar devices hitting the market. Solar flashlights (I’ve often wandered what use they were), solar-powered radios, and, recently, solar battery chargers.

One can also now find a wide range of portable solar chargers and panels, which are lightweight and easy to transport, yet capable of providing a decent amount of power in even the most remote locations. Solar chargers are becoming a standard part of wilderness survival kits and emergency preparedness kits.

All of this is a result of the developments in solar cell technology, and the coming of the Solar Age.

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