http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-ecoparc3jul03,1,5296931.story?coll=la-headlines-business

Pioneering Technology Lab Now Puts Energy Into Solar
PARC and others are tackling the mechanics as well as the efficiency of 
photovoltaic power.
By Charles Piller
LA Times Staff Writer

July 3, 2006



PALO ALTO — Over the years, the Palo Alto Research Center has developed 
numerous electricity-gobbling innovations.

Now the storied lab that gave the world laser printing and graphical user 
interfaces is trying to harness the sun to power its inventions.

The Xerox Corp. subsidiary known as PARC has produced super-efficient solar 
systems that experts say could make photovoltaic power — sunlight converted 
directly into electricity — available on a large scale at prices 
competitive with fossil fuels for the first time. PARC's technology is one 
of several promising approaches in the field.

"Solar is growing at 30% annually," said analyst Ron Pernick of Clean Edge 
Inc., a research organization that specializes in alternative energy 
technology. Comparing the expansion to the best years of the personal 
computer industry, Pernick forecasts that solar power will be a $51-billion 
global business in 2015, up from $11.2 billion last year.

The research at PARC is part of an eco-friendly technology trend that draws 
on the materials and know-how that built computer microprocessors and other 
high-tech staples.

PARC's efforts dovetail with Silicon Valley's push into "clean tech," 
including conservation and renewable energy. Reusable paper is another of 
PARC's development projects. The California Clean Tech Open, sponsored by 
dozens of companies, venture capital firms, universities and other groups, 
recently received 155 competing business concepts.

In an era of stratospheric oil prices, investors are beginning to see solar 
as the next big thing, despite its embryonic state. Many industry watchers 
expect to see large rooftop collectors for powering businesses and solar 
farms that will approach the size of major power plants.

"The electricity market is as big as the sky," said Erik Straser of Mohr 
Davidow Ventures in Menlo Park, who has invested in emerging solar companies.

That hopefulness stems from dramatic technology changes. For decades, solar 
power was dominated by thermal systems that heat water for bathing or power 
small turbines to create electricity. Photovoltaic technology — the 
combination of light and electricity — is gradually replacing thermal.

At the core of photovoltaic cells are semiconductor materials such as 
silicon. Solar rays knock electrons loose from silicon atoms; those 
electrons are drawn off to create a current. Solar arrays combine many cells.

The first generation of photovoltaic technology was based on large, heavy 
collectors — costly, inefficient systems that converted only 10% to 15% of 
solar rays to power. The rest reflected away or diffused as waste heat.

Recently, a handful of companies have developed systems that use mirrors or 
lenses to concentrate the sun's rays as much as 500 times and increase 
efficiency to as much as 26%, with projections up to 50%. Higher efficiency 
means cheaper power.

Several such "concentrating photovoltaic" schemes have been devised.

PARC's concentrating technology was developed with SolFocus, a start-up 
being incubated inside PARC. The first-generation system comprises grids of 
solar collectors about 8 inches thick. Metal cones and optical systems 
concentrate sunlight on a 1-square-centimeter solar chip.

The second-generation system shrinks the collectors 90% and makes them 
about half an inch thick, creating a honeycomb of precision-molded glass 
coated with mirrors. The newer technology uses chips just 1 millimeter 
square made from layers of germanium and silicon. The layers absorb 
different parts of the solar spectrum to increase efficiency.

Their small size would make the collectors more economical and easier to 
mount on the rooftops of commercial buildings, such as big-box retailers in 
sunny climates. Last year, SolFocus' entry beat more than 100 competing 
designs to win the National Renewable Energy Laboratory Growth Forum award.

PARC estimates that the new system would easily compete with fossil fuels 
at today's prices, although it won't be ready for commercial use for a few 
years.

David Fork, a PARC scientist and co-inventor of the solid-glass system, 
said the design had another big advantage over earlier technology: It could 
theoretically last 100 years, thanks largely to durable materials. It also 
solves another key problem: dangerous levels of waste heat that have dogged 
concentrator systems.

With previous designs, "things have burned. Rooftops have caught fire," 
particularly in areas where leaves or other debris clog the system, Fork said.

PARC is also working on a solar technology that returns to the lab's roots, 
printing circuitry onto solar chip assemblies to cut costs and improve the 
flow of electricity. Fork said the technology brings the costs to a level 
comparable to printing paper. "It's very similar to what a customer at 
Kinko's might pay for a printed page," he said.

New technologies are making solar a hot bet for venture capitalists, who 
pumped $150 million into solar start-ups last year, according to Clean Edge.

Straser has invested in Energy Innovations Inc., a Pasadena company run by 
Bill Gross of technology incubator Idealab. Its computer-controlled 
Sunflower product tracks sunbeams and produces both photovoltaic power and 
hot water.

Straser also supported Nanosolar, a Palo Alto start-up that prints 
ultrathin solar cells — made from metal alloys rather than silicon — on 
metal strips, much in the way newspapers roll off a press. Nanosolar 
announced in June that it had raised $100 million to build a fabrication plant.

Energizing the solar industry to make it a significant part of the energy 
economy may prove the tech industry's most daunting challenge for the future.

In 2004, the most recent year for which data are available, solar accounted 
for only 0.06% of the nation's power supply, according to the U.S. Energy 
Information Administration. Just 19 firms with about 2,900 employees 
shipped photovoltaic systems.

The world's largest planned photovoltaic plant, being built in Portugal by 
General Electric Co.'s Energy Financial Services, is designed to supply 11 
megawatts, enough to power about 8,000 homes. By comparison, some nuclear, 
coal and oil-powered plants produce more than 2,000 megawatts.

Yet the benefits of solar are evident even in that relatively small 
project. The Portuguese plant would save 30,000 tons of greenhouse gases 
emitted annually by fossil-fuel-fired generators, according to GE.

Using available technologies, a 200-mile-by-200-mile patch of desert 
blanketed by photovoltaic cells could supply all of the United States' 
electricity needs, a widely accepted estimate has it. Of course, that 
40,000 square miles of generating capacity, if ever developed, would 
probably be distributed among small plots of land and the roofs of 
buildings in Los Angeles and every city that enjoys a lot of sun.

"In the next several decades, it's very doable, technically," PARC's Fork 
said. "It would take human and political will — that's all."


=================================================
George Antunes                    Voice (713) 743-3923
Associate Professor               Fax   (713) 743-3927
Political Science                    Internet: antunes at uh dot edu
University of Houston
Houston, TX 77204-3011         



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