Solar energy that usually escapes Earth overnight can now be captured, say scientists
The world is one step closer to nighttime solar power after a breakthrough discovery by Australian scientists.
University of New South Wales (UNSW) scientists have found a way to ‘ catch’ energy that flows out of the earth at night.
“This could mean being able to achieve the ultimate dream of renewable energy: power generation uninterrupted by the setting of the sun,” the researchers claim.
So how does this sci-fi technol-ogy work - and when will it hit the market?
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How does nighttime solar power work?
Nighttime solar taps into a “large and unused spectrum of potential power,” the research team says.
Heat - which is a form of energy - flows from hot areas to cold areas.
Every day, the earth absorbs heat from the sun. At night, this heat escapes the earth in the form of infrared light, and is sucked out into the icy vacuum of space.
If it didn’t, the planet would quickly become far too hot to sustain life.
UNSW scientists use the catchi-ly-named ‘thermoradiative diode’ - a type of semiconductor also used in nigh vision goggles - to capture the infrared radiation as it escapes earth.
They then convert the ‘cap-tured’ power into electricity.
Both normal and nighttime so-lar depend on the flow of energy from hot to cold areas, explains Ned Ekins-Daukes, the teams’ lead researcher..
“[With normal solar power], the sun provides the hot source and a relatively cool solar panel on the Earth’s surface provides a cold absorber. This allows electricity to be produced,” he adds.
“[At night] it is now the Earth that is the comparatively warm body, with the vast void of space being extremely cold.
“By the same principles of ther-modynamics, it is possible to generate electricity from this temperature difference too: the emission of infrared light into space.”
When will nighttime solar be widely available?
‘Nighttime solar’ power is still in the early stages of development.
The amount of energy pro-duced by UNSW researchers was very small, roughly equivalent to 0.001 per cent of a normal solar powered cell.
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But given the right investment, the technology could one day generate around 10 per cent of the power produced by a solar powered cell.
Other teams around the globe are also working hard to develop night solar. Stanford scientists are developing a different technique to 'catch' the earth's radiant heat.
The concept has huge poten-tial, claims Dr Michael Nielsen, coauthor of the UNSW study.
“Even if the commercialisation of these technologies is still a way down the road, being at the very beginning of an evolving idea is such an exciting place to be as a researcher,” he says.
“By leveraging our knowledge of how to design and optimise solar cells, and borrowing materials from the existing mid-infrared photodetector community, we hope for rapid progress towards delivering the dream of solar power at night.”