----- Original Message ----- 
From: Scott Bergeson 
To: undisclosed-recipients: 
Sent: Friday, October 03, 2008 12:45 PM
Subject: 500x Solar Cell Efficiency discovered by Beaverton boy lauded forsolar 
cell invention | KATU.com - Portland, Oregon | News


http://www.katu.com/news/28432984html

12-Year-Old May Hold Key to Solar Energy
09.19.08
by Alan Henry

One significant problem with existing solar technology
is that it's not terribly efficient at harvesting
solar energy and turning it into electricity.

Solar technology is improving all the time, but one
12-year-old boy may have the key to making solar panels
that can harness 500 times the light of a traditional
solar cell. William Yuan is a seventh grader in Oregon
whose project, titled "A Highly-Efficient 3-Dimensional
Nanotube Solar Cell for Visible and UV Light", may
change the energy industry and make solar energy
far easier to harness and distribute.

At the heart of Yuan's project is a special solar cell
that can harness both visible and ultraviolet light.
Most solar cells in use today are either photovoltaic,
meaning they harness only visible light, or thermal.
While visible, infrared, and ultraviolet light are all
heavily scattered or absorbed by the Earth's atmosphere,
ultraviolet light comes in at shorter wavelengths and
with higher energy than both visible and infrared light.
Ultraviolet light can provide more energy to a collector
than other, longer-wavelength members of the electro-
magnetic spectrum. Yuan's solar cells are not just
innovative for their collection of UV light, but also
because they're engineered to stand freely in three
dimensions (which allows them to collect more light)
and make use of carbon nanotubes, which allow the
cell to distribute the energy it collects without
dissipating as much as traditional cells do.

Yuan is looking for a manufacturer to invest in building
his new solar cell, and likely won't have a problem finding
a partner. Yuan's solar cells have earned him a $25,000
scholarship to fund his education and research, a fellowship
at the Davidson Institute for Talent Development, and a
host of other awards in science and engineering. Yuan isn't
the only young inventor making a difference, more and more
young innovators are changing the face of clean technology.

Copyright © 1996-2008 Ziff Davis Publishing Holdings Inc. All Rights Reserved.
PC Magazine is a registered trademark of Ziff Davis Publishing Holdings Inc.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without
express written permission of Ziff Davis Media Inc. is prohibited.

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