• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Your Backpack May One Day Generate Solar Power Thanks To “Revolutionary” New Material

August 30, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

A newly developed material may be about to revolutionize solar energy. Created using what the researchers call a “multi-junction” approach, the material is already more efficient than many traditional solar panels – while simultaneously being thin and flexible enough to be incorporated into everyday objects.

Advertisement

As the scholars Flansburgh and Linnell famously explained:  “The sun is a mass of incandescent gas; a gigantic nuclear furnace”. As such, it’s a huge, and we mean huge, source of power, delivering approximately 44 quadrillion watts – the equivalent of the output of 44 million large electric power plants – to the Earth’s surface every year. 

Harnessing this energy as a renewable power source is, therefore, an obvious move. In practice, however, things are more complicated: giant solar farms may be good for the climate, but they’re often bad for wildlife, reducing biodiversity and sometimes even replacing natural ecosystems such as forests. 

So far, though, other options such as roof-mounted solar panels are less powerful and more expensive, leaving giant solar farms the only option for harvesting the sun’s energy efficiently. At least, until now – because, with this new innovation from the University of Oxford, we might be about to see a dramatic shift in how we can collect solar power.

“By using new materials which can be applied as a coating, we’ve shown we can replicate and out-perform silicon whilst also gaining flexibility,” said Junke Wang, Marie Skłodowska Curie Actions Postdoc Fellow at Oxford University Physics, in a statement on the development. “This is important because it promises more solar power without the need for so many silicon-based panels or specially-built solar farms.”

Essentially, the team has created a material that combines the trifecta of solar-harvesting properties: it’s cheap, it’s efficient, and it’s eminently usable. 

Advertisement

Built up from multiple light-absorbing layers, the new material can harness a wider range of the light spectrum, making it extremely efficient by solar technology standards. Indeed, it has already been independently verified to deliver more than 27 percent energy efficiency – which may not sound a lot, but it’s “close to the limits of what single-layer photovoltaics can achieve today,” explained Shuaifeng Hu, Post Doctoral Fellow at Oxford University Physics.

But Hu believes this early success is just the beginning. “During just five years experimenting with our stacking or multi-junction approach we have raised power conversion efficiency from around 6 percent to over 27 percent,” he pointed out. “We believe that, over time, this approach could enable the photovoltaic devices to achieve far greater efficiencies, exceeding 45 percent.”

At the same time, however, the material is thin – a mere one micron thick, almost 150 times thinner than a silicon wafer, the statement reports – and flexible enough to apply to the surface of almost anything, from buildings and roads to even backpacks or mobile phones. 

Such innovations “could become a platform for a new industry,” suggested Henry Snaith, Professor of Renewable Energy at Oxford University Physics Department, who led the project; “manufacturing materials to generate solar energy more sustainably and cheaply by using existing buildings, vehicles, and objects.”

Advertisement

This spread of solar harvesting into the everyday is an idea that has proved popular in recent years: we’ve already seen concrete that can power your car as you drive on top of it, and we theoretically have everything we need to build a solar power-generating house, windows included. With solar power growing ever more efficient – and increasingly, much cheaper than fossil fuel energy – some experts now believe a solar-powered future is now all but inevitable.

“Thus far the UK has thought about solar energy purely in terms of building new solar farms, but the real growth will come from commercializing innovations,” Snaith said. 

“Supplying these materials will be a fast-growth new industry in the global green economy and we have shown that the UK is innovating and leading the way scientifically,” he added. “However, without new incentives and a better pathway to convert this innovation into manufacturing the UK will miss the opportunity to lead this new global industry.”

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Exclusive-Singapore’s ADVANCE.AI raising $200 million from Warburg Pincus-led investors – sources
  2. Restaurant-software maker Toast valued at nearly $33 billion as shares surge in debut
  3. Google adds news ways to shop, like turning a website’s photos into shoppable products
  4. “Demon” Quasiparticle Finally Observed After Decades Of Predictions

Source Link: Your Backpack May One Day Generate Solar Power Thanks To "Revolutionary" New Material

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • “Far From A Pop-Science Relic”: Why “6 Degrees Of Separation” Rules The Modern World
  • IFLScience We Have Questions: Can Sheep Livers Predict The Future?
  • The Cavendish Experiment: In 1797, Henry Cavendish Used Two Small Metal Spheres To Weigh The Entire Earth
  • People Are Only Now Learning Where The Titanic Actually Sank
  • A New Way Of Looking At Einstein’s Equations Could Reveal What Happened Before The Big Bang
  • First-Ever Look At Neanderthal Nasal Cavity Shatters Expectations, NASA Reveals Comet 3I/ATLAS Images From 8 Missions, And Much More This Week
  • The Latest Internet Debate: Is It More Efficient To Walk Around On Massive Stilts?
  • The Trump Administration Wants To Change The Endangered Species Act – Here’s What To Know
  • That Iconic Lion Roar? Turns Out, They Have A Whole Other One That We Never Knew About
  • What Are Gravity Assists And Why Do Spacecraft Use Them So Much?
  • In 2026, Unique Mission Will Try To Save A NASA Telescope Set To Uncontrollably Crash To Earth
  • Blue Origin Just Revealed Its Latest New Glenn Rocket And It’s As Tall As SpaceX’s Starship
  • What Exactly Is The “Man In The Moon”?
  • 45,000 Years Ago, These Neanderthals Cannibalized Women And Children From A Rival Group
  • “Parasocial” Announced As Word Of The Year 2025 – Does It Describe You? And Is It Even Healthy?
  • Why Do Crocodiles Not Eat Capybaras?
  • Not An Artist Impression – JWST’s Latest Image Both Wows And Solves Mystery Of Aging Star System
  • “We Were Genuinely Astonished”: Moss Spores Survive 9 Months In Space Before Successfully Reproducing Back On Earth
  • The US’s Surprisingly Recent Plan To Nuke The Moon In Search Of “Negative Mass”
  • 14,400-Year-Old Paw Prints Are World’s Oldest Evidence Of Humans Living Alongside Domesticated Dogs
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version