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Written by Francisco Cano Category: Solar Power
Published on 04 June 2011 Hits: 302
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Get Ready for the Solar Shingle Craze

dow-solar-shingles-powerhouse
In Midland, Michigan, construction crews are preparing to deliver what may very well be the future of clean energy: solar shingles.

 

Dow Chemical Co., perhaps the biggest leader in solar shingles manufacturing, is building a new facility for production of the Dow Powerhouse Solar Shingles, with which they hope to capture a $5 billion market share by 2015.

The plant will begin production in 2012 and employ 1,275 people. Aside from boosting production and putting the locals to work, Dow seeks to make Michigan a “green-tech hub of the new U.S. economy,” said Earl Shipp, VP of Dow’s Michigan operations.

I’ve had a love affair with solar shingles since they first hit the market in 2005. They’re able to solve many of the problems that plague solar as an industry, like the common (albeit misguided) complaint that solar panels are an eyesore.

The shingles, which have about 12 by 86 inches of surface area, can be integrated seamlessly into your rooftop.dow-shingles-show-house

What’s more, they shield the home. They offer the protective properties of normal shingles while generating clean energy at the same time. Similar in hue to traditional asphalt shingles, solar shingles blend in surprisingly well with deep, dark-colored roofing materials.

Installation costs are usually cheaper as well, since solar shingles can be stapled directly to your roofing cloth and installed by a regular roofer in 10 hours (versus 22-30 hours for a solar panel array). For more on solar costs in your area, click here.

Until now, the solar shingle trend has been in its infancy. But Dow hopes to change all that.

Powerhouse Solar Shingles are already being featured on two Great Lakes Bay homes in Michigan. Mark Wahl, co-owner of Cobblestone Homes and builder of one of the show-houses above,
foresees an explosion in solar shingle popularity.

“[The solar shingles] have been hooked up by our builders and electricians on two homes now, and for Dow to take that to a mass market is really big,” Wahl told MLive.com.

“Our company deals with solar panels, but we have to bring in an installation firm. Because builders can install these shingles, Dow will be able to easily sell them across America,” he said.

Dow has a soft launch of their solar shingles scheduled for the first quarter of this year, which should bring the products substantial exposure.

If this trend picks up, not only would more homeowners be able to afford solar, but solar contractors and roofers alike could expand their offerings.

 

Source: CalFinder, "Get Ready for the Solar Shingle Craze", 3 Jun, 2011. Web. 4 Jun, 2011.

 
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1 User Rating:  / 0
Written by Francisco Cano Category: Solar Power
Published on 04 June 2011 Hits: 230
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Solar Inverters: Losses Are Cut in Half

 

news-solar-inverter-losses-are-cut-in-halfScienceDaily (June 3, 2011) — A switching trick makes it possible to cut the losses of a series-production inverter in half and increase the efficiency from 96 to 98 percent. The HERIC®-topology makes it possible to achieve a world-record efficiency of more than 99 percent.

 

"It was a matter of minutes," Dr. Heribert Schmidt remembers the day in spring of 2002. To find opportunities for improvement, he had often pondered about the switching plan of an inverter while in his office at the Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems ISE in Freiburg, Germany. A sudden flash of inspiration -- and a solution that was ingeniously simple came to his mind. He immediately went to get an inverter from the laboratory, laid a few new strips and installed two additional semiconductor switches. "Then it required only a little bit of work on the controls -- and we already had the proof!" This is how the electrical engineer, who holds a doctorate in electrical engineering, described the revolutionary step in brief: the losses could be halved and the degree of effectiveness could be increased from 96 to 98 percent.

 

Key component for electricity feed

After the solar generator, the inverter is the second key component of a grid-linked photovoltaics system. Solar modules generate direct current. If the current is to be fed into the public grid, then it must be converted into grid-compatible alternating current. The inverter handles this task. Single-phase feed inverters consist of three essential parts: the buffer capacitor at the input which provides intermediate storage for the direct current from the solar generator; the inverter bridge with four semiconductor switches that "chop up" the direct current by rapidly switching on and off and as a third component, the inductor at the output that converts the alternating current into a perfect sinus current.

 

In a short time from the idea to the product

Heribert Schmidt knew: A large portion of the losses are caused by the return of current between the output inductor and the input capacitor. The question therefore was how to prevent this. "That's easy," said Heribert Schmidt after a sudden inspiration: "If I decouple the capacitor and the inductors completely from each other at certain intervals, then it is impossible for a return current to flow, and electro-magnetic disturbances cannot occur at the input as a result of voltage spikes." He immediately had his invention patented as HERIC® topology and began to develop a new series of devices with the SUNWAYS company in Konstanz, Germany. Experts were astonished, and awards and recognition followed quickly: "By far the best device in this performance category." In the meantime, an encompassing patent has been awarded to the basic idea and the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft is in negotiations with additional licensees.

 

Source: Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft. "Solar inverters: Losses are cut in half." ScienceDaily, 3 Jun. 2011. Web. 4 Jun. 2011

 
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