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Energy Net

Peak Energy: Powerful Polymers: Pushing Plastic Solar Cells - 0 views

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    Technology Review has an article on plastic solar cells with "near-perfect internal efficiency" - Pushing Plastic Solar Cells. Plastic solar cells are lightweight, flexible, and, most important, cheap to make. But so far, these devices have been too inefficient to compete with silicon solar cells for most applications. Now researchers from a few institutions claim to have made polymer solar cells with record-breaking efficiencies. These cells still aren't good enough to compete with silicon, but polymer efficiencies have been increasing at a rate of about 1 percent a year. If they can keep this up, say researchers, plastic solar cells will be competing with silicon within a few years.
rockurbody

Plastic Milk - 0 views

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    eat food along with its wrapper........a crazy idea to entertain all readers..............wanna know more just read out.
ava777

Creative Portable Water Plastic Bottle - 0 views

Keep your water cool and eliminate "bottle sweat" with handy neoprene insulated sleeves. Inclusive Inner Strainer/ Filter - Keep your fruit / Ice in your bottle without clogging your drinking spout...

started by ava777 on 01 Jun 19 no follow-up yet
eco20-20

7 Spray Water Saving Hose Nozzle: Eco20/20 - 0 views

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    The seven spray water saving hose nozzle is a wonderful device that regulates the flow of additional water savings. It is made up of a medium duty plastic body and is very much durable.
Energy Net

TG Daily - New solar cell material achieves almost 100% efficiency, could solve world-w... - 0 views

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    Researchers at Ohio State University have accidentally discovered a new solar cell material capable of absorbing all of the sun's visible light energy. The material is comprised of a hybrid of plastics, molybdenum and titanium. The team discovered it not only fluoresces (as most solar cells do), but also phosphoresces. Electrons in a phosphorescent state remain at a place where they can be "siphoned off" as electricity over 7 million times longer than those generated in a fluorescent state. This combination of materials also utilizes the entire visible spectrum of light energy, translating into a theoretical potential of almost 100% efficiency. Commercial products are still years away, but this foundational work may well pave the way for a truly renewable form of clean, global energy.
Energy Net

Flexible Nanoantennas Put Us On The Road To Affordable Solar Power | Scientific Blogging - 0 views

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    Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's Idaho National Laboratory say they have devised an inexpensive way to produce plastic sheets containing billions of nanoantennas that collect heat energy generated by the sun and other sources. They say this technology is the first step toward a solar energy collector that could be mass-produced on flexible materials.
Energy Net

Solar Power's New Style - TIME - 0 views

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    Mike Gering, CEO of the start-up Global Solar, picks his way along his factory floor, tracing the convoluted path that his thin-film solar panels follow from birth to shipping truck. The raw materials the workers carry are ultra-thin sheets of flexible plastic, which are then coated with a series of chemicals--indium, gallium, diselenide--that allows the module to turn sunlight into electricity.
Energy Net

One Wash, One Cup of Water: Nearly Waterless Washing Machine Invented - 0 views

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    British inventors have designed a washing machine that takes eco-friendliness to a new level: it uses just a single cup of water to wash a load of clothes. Instead of water the Xeros machine uses thousands of special plastic chips (about 44 pounds' worth) in each wash, and when that single cup of water is heated, these chips absorb the dirt-including tricky stuff like coffee and lipstick. The chips are removed when the wash ends, and can be reused up to 100 times. Though it's still in prototyping, the inventors are intending to commercialize their machine, and it may even hit the shops next year for a price similar to conventional machines.
Energy Net

Peak Energy: Mass Production of Plastic Solar Cells - 0 views

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    In a significant milestone in the deployment of flexible, printed photovoltaics, Konarka, a solar-cell startup based in Lowell, MA, has opened a commercial-scale factory, with the capacity to produce enough organic solar cells every year to generate one gigawatt of electricity, the equivalent of a large nuclear reactor. Organic solar cells could cut the cost of solar power by making use of inexpensive organic polymers rather than the expensive crystalline silicon used in most solar cells. What's more, the polymers can be processed using low-cost equipment such as ink-jet printers or coating equipment employed to make photographic film, which reduces both capital and manufacturing costs compared with conventional solar-cell manufacturing.
Joshua Sherk

ChicoBag - 0 views

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    Plastic preventing item
Energy Net

Economist.com: producing electricity with cheap Solar balloons - 0 views

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    SOLAR cells are expensive, so it makes sense to use them efficiently. One way to do so is to concentrate sunlight onto them. That means a smaller area of cell can be used to convert a given amount of light into electricity. This, though, imposes another cost-that of the mirrors needed to do the concentrating. Traditionally these are large pieces of polished metal, steered by electric motors to keep the sun's rays focused on the cell. But now Cool Earth Solar of Livermore, California, has come up with what it hopes will be a better, cheaper alternative: balloons. Anyone who has children will be familiar with aluminised party balloons. Such balloons are made from metal-coated plastic. Cool Earth's insight was that if you coat only one half of a balloon, leaving the other transparent, the inner surface of the coated half will act as a concave mirror. Put a solar cell at the focus of that mirror and you have an inexpensive solar-energy collector.
Pericles Filho

The Fun Theory - 0 views

  • Many of us return our plastic bottles and cans. Noticeably fewer recycle their glass. Maybe that's because we don't get any money in return, as we do for cans and plastic. Can we change this attitude by making recycling glass fun to do? So you are not just rewarded with a good conscience, you also get a smile. See the results here.
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    very nice idea to change lifestyle
Shelia Morales

Skincare & Skinmedica Laser Treatments St. louis | O'Fallon - 0 views

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    Cutera was founded in 1998 and has quickly become a leader in the laser and light-based aesthetic market. Their lasers are used widely by primary care physicians, dermatologists, plastic surgeons and gynecologists for safe, effective and non-invasive aesthetic treatments for their patients.
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