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Home Solar Power Energy Payback – part seven

December 15, 2009 Author: Lauryn Andres

single_crystal_cellsElectricity derived from coal and natural gas will never be able to outweigh the energy and continual resources required to produce it.

Systems also require periodic maintenance. Trim growing trees or shrubs that may start to shade the array. Keeping modules dust- and debris-free will help keep performance at its peak. A quick system output check can confirm that all is in good working order. (For tips on maximizing PV system performance, see “Pump Up the Power” in this issue.) Keeping your PV system in optimal working order will minimize PV system energy payback time, decrease the use of fossil fuels and associated CO2 production, and reduce the money you will need to spend on utility power or backup generator fuel.

Conventional Power vs. PV
Electricity derived from coal and natural gas will never be able to outweigh the energy and continual resources required to produce it. Additionally, there are the associated environmental impacts of global warming and air, water, and soil pollution due to the emissions from fossil-fuel based power plants, and the environmental impacts of mining, drilling, and transporting coal and natural gas.

Unlike conventional energy sources, PV systems produce clean electricity for decades after achieving their energy payback in three or fewer years-this is truly the magic of PV technology.

this should answer some of your questions about PV Energy Payback times and costs. It just makes sense, if we no longer need part or all of the Utilities resources to power our homes, we will then save money in the long run. If your planning on keeping your home for at least 3 years, it will pay off for you.

By learning how to build your own solar panel system, you’ll save even more and shorten your payback time substantially. You can learn to built your own solar panels simply and efficiently with the instructions available at the link that’s highlighted. These kits, which include video instructions and as well as well written and informative manuals, teach you where to find the materials locally and cheaply, how to assemble them, and mount the units to your home. It can’t be simpler, and does make for a fun weekend project. Also on this site you’ll find books and other resources that are informative on solar and wind power as well as sustainable living, green construction, tax’s and grants that are available, and fun solar products for your home. Check it out!
Access

Resources:
Alsema, Erik & Mariska de Wild-Scholten. 26-27 November 2007.
“Reduction of Environmental Impacts in Crystalline Silicon Photovoltaic
Technology-An Analysis of Driving Forces and Opportunities.”
Materials Research Society, Fall 2007 meeting, Symposium R, Boston.
“PV Payback,” Karl Knapp & Theresa Jester, HP80
Thanks to Erik Alsema, Karl Knapp, and project CrystalClear
(www.ipcrystalclear.info) for their help and resources.

Home Solar Power Energy Payback – part six

December 14, 2009 Author: Lauryn Andres

Energy paybackVariations in Energy Payback
Available sunlight. EPBT calculations are heavily influenced by how much sunlight a PV system will receive. The more sunlight received, the more KWH the PV system will produce-and the faster the PV system will offset the energy it took to manufacture it. The 2006 study reported EPBT of one to two years based on an average of 4.7 peak sun-hours received in southern Europe. If you live in a sunnier climate, then the energy payback time will be less. For example, a system installed in Grand Junction, Colorado, which averages 5.8 peak sun-hours daily, can cut its EPBT by more than 23% under a southern European site. However, the converse is true as well. If you live in a cloudier climate, the PV system’s EPBT will be longer. The current overall worldwide average EPBT of one to three years (rather than one to two years for southern Europe) accounts for cloudier locations across the globe.

PV System Performance & Maintenance. While PV installers and system owners do not have much control over the manufacturing process of PV modules or the peak sun-hours available, they can influence the energy payback times of their systems with good system design and maintenance

Good site analysis reduces or eliminates PV array shading and aims for high system efficiency. And adequately sized wires will reduce voltage drop and thus increase power output over undersized wiring. Providing adequate airflow around modules to reduce voltage loss due to increasing cell temperature will increase power output. Finally, carefully matching the array size to the inverter and local temperature conditions will help squeeze the last available energy out of a system.

Yeh, I know, the Dow Jones is recovering nicely, but we all know that along with our recovering economy, prices will begin to clime as well. Now is the time to consider and implement your plan to make your home more energy efficient and start to save on your energy bills. By learning how to make solar panels yourself you SAVE on the expense of hiring a company to do what you could do in a fun filled adventurous weekend. Your cost savings will be in the thousands of dollars when you build your own home solar panel system , when compared to what the major companies charge, but more importantly, you can start saving hundreds of dollars in electrical costs each monthonce your home made solar panel system is completed. Click the highlighted link and check out the home solar system kits now!

Home Solar Power Energy Payback – part five

December 12, 2009 Author: Lauryn Andres

Energy paybackCalculating Energy Payback

EPBT is calculated by dividing the energy needed to produce a PV system (“specific energy”) by the system’s energy generation rate:
EPBT (Years) = Specific Energy (KWH) ÷ Annual Energy Generation (KWH/year)
Note that “specific energy” accounts not only for the direct energy required to produce PV systems, but also the embodied energy of the raw materials used in manufacturing all the parts of the PV system.
A study conducted by CrystalClear, a research and development project on advanced industrial crystalline silicon PV technology, gives 2006 EPBT values for complete rooftop, grid-tied systems.
The study includes the EPBT for balance of system (BOS) components (racks, inverters, wires, etc.) and assumes a system efficiency of 75% to account for losses from module temperature,
wiring, and inverter inefficiency. The study uses average solar data for southern Europe, which is estimated at 1,700 KWH/m2 per year. The U.S. average is slightly higher at 1,800 KWH/m2 per year, which means EPBT for U.S. installations is even shorter.

The study shows the EPBT for standard, single-crystalline module PV systems to be two years. For PV systems using multicrystalline modules produced by the casting method, the EPBT is calculated at 1.7 years. PV systems with modules produced using the ribbon method reduced the EPBT to 1.5 years. EPBT values for thin-film module-based PV systems were reported in a 2004 study. While there are several types of thinfilm PV technologies-the most common are amorphoussilicon (a-Si), cadmium telluride (CdTe), copper indium diselenide (CIS), and copper indium gallium diselenide (CIGS)-the 2004 study highlights the CdTe modules and shows an EPBT of 1.0 years.

Future technology comes with a high cost for the end user, it takes years to convince the public to buy with enough sales to be able to produce the quantity required to keep the cost low. So, lets not too excited about the latest and greatest , before we lose out on the potential savings that is available today. NOW not later is the time to take a stand and make your decision that not only will you participate in reducing YOUR carbon footprint but that you will also reduce the amount of high cost energy you use. Build your own solar panels for your own renewable energy system today, you’ll find that most of the utility companies will even help you hook your system up to their power lines and even provide you with NET METERING capabilities. Through the DIY home solar system kits available you can learn how to build solar panels, wind generators or much more. These instructions are so easy to follow, most non handy individuals can master the ability readily.

Save now on your energy bills and on the expense of hiring a company to do what you could do in a fun filled adventurous weekend. Your cost savings will be well worthy of the time you spend clicking on the link above and finding out the information you need to make your decision on “do it yourself solar powered homes”.

Home Solar Power Energy Payback – part four

December 11, 2009 Author: Lauryn Andres

futureFuture EPBT Projections

In 1975, EPBT for most PV modules was estimated at 20 years. Today, it only takes an average of three years or less for PV systems to produce the energy required to offset what it took to manufacture the systems, and EPBT continues to decrease each
year.

PV manufacturers are always seeking to reduce manufacturing costs, through reducing the amount of silicon required, improving PV cell efficiency, experimenting with new materials, and by utilizing new production methods. Most cost-reduction strategies will also reduce energy payback time. In their EPBT research on the CrystalClear project, authors Erik Alsema and Mariska de Wild-Scholten estimate “that developments underway to reduce costs will also result in a reduction of the energy payback time of a PV installation (in southern Europe) from 1.5 to 2 years presently, to well below one year.” With higher average peak sun-hours in the United States, future EPBT for modules installed here will be even lower.

As we all know, future technology always comes at a high cost to the consumer initially and will take years to become affordable, to the average consumer. So while we all wait with pins and needles for the latest advances, we lose out on the potential savings available today. NOW is the time to step up and make a difference in the world and reduce YOUR carbon footprint that you help create by buying into your Utilities power supply and build your own solar panels for your own renewable energy system. Today, most of the utility companies will even help you hook your system up to their power lines and even provide you with NET METERING capabilities. Through the DIY home solar system kits available you can learn how to build solar panels, wind generators or much more. These instructions are so easy to follow most non handy individuals can master the ability.

Now is the time to save on your energy bills and SAVE on the expense of hiring a company to do what you could do in a fun filled adventurous weekend. Your cost savings will be in the thousands of dollars in building your own home solar system from what the major companies charge, but more importantly, you can start savuing hundreds of dollars in electrical costs once your home made solar panels is completed. Click the highlighted link and check out the home solar kits now!

Home Solar Power Energy Payback – part three

December 10, 2009 Author: Lauryn Andres

Thin-film PV modules uses considerably less energy than crystalline PV

Thin-film PV modules use a deposition process, in which different layers of the PV cell are sprayed directly onto a substrate. Since there are no individual crystals to break, this substrate can be flexible and virtually any shape or size. The PV cells are completed after all the layers of the semiconductor material have been applied to the substrate by scribing the entire module into individual cells with lasers. Thin-film modules use a transparent conducting oxide (also applied as a layer in the deposition process) for electrical contacts, instead of an unbendable metal grid as crystalline cells.

The production process for thin-film PV modules uses considerably less energy than crystalline PV-there is no vat of molten silicon brewing, and there are no ingots to be sawed. The most energy-intensive aspects of manufacturing a thin-film PV module are usually the deposition process, the substrate itself, the aluminum frame, and the glass or plastic covering. The EPBT for thin-film PV systems is about 50% less than for crystalline PV systems.

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It’s worth a look!

Tomorrow, we continue the discussion on energy paybacks.

Home Solar Power Energy Payback – part two

December 9, 2009 Author: Lauryn Andres

Cell machineMulticrystalline PV cells are generally made using a casting process,

where molten silicon is poured into a square mold and left to solidify. This process creates many crystals within an ingot. The ingot is sliced into thin square wafers to produce PV cells in the same way as the single-crystal process. Once the cells are created, the manufacturing proceeds
as for monocrystalline modules. You can spot a multicrystalline PV module by its varied, glittering crystal surface, compared to very uniform-looking single-crystal silicon cells.

Multicrystalline PV modules do require less energy to produce than CZproduced monocrystalline PV modules partly because the cooling process for the cast ingot uses less energy. The energy payback times for multicrystalline PV systems are about 15% less than for monocrystalline PV systems.

The energy embodied in a PV module includes not only the energy to produce its
basic materials, but the energy of the manufacturing process as well

String Ribbon Silicon.

Another way to produce a crystalline PV module is to grow thin ribbons of silicon that can be cut into individual cells. One method that produces these types of cells pulls two parallel wires out of a vat of molten silicon. As the wires are pulled up, a thin sheet of silicon the width of a finished cell stretches and hardens between them, much like soapy film stretches between the sides of a child’s bubble wand. Because the ribbon silicon sheet is so thin, it does not need to be sliced as ingots do, but is sectioned into cell-sized lengths to make individual PV cells. The ribbon
silicon cells are formed into modules the same way as the monocrystalline and multicrystalline PV technologies. The ribbon technique reduces the energy and silicon crystal waste associated with sawing the wafers (kerf loss) from a crystalline ingot, reducing the energy payback time compared to monocrystalline by about 25% and multicrystalline PV by approximately 12%.

Tomorrow we continue this discussion

Meanwhile, take a look at some DIY Home solar kits , click this link and see how you can save a tremendous amount of money by learning how to build your own solar panel. It’s a fun, easy weekend project that will pay dividends quickly. Also you’ll find at this site books on sustainable living, green construction, and reducing your carbon footprint as well as solar and wind energy.

Home Solar Power Energy Payback – part one

December 8, 2009 Author: Lauryn Andres

single_crystal_cellsPhotovoltaic technology is a fantastic miracle of science

Photovoltaic technology is a fantastic miracle of science that silently converts sunlightinto streaming electrons that can be used to do work. While sunlight magically fallsfrom the sky, PV modules and their associated components do not-each consumes energy and resources along every step of the production process, from material harvesting to manufacturing to assembly and shipping.

A common myth about PV technology is that it takes more energy to produce a PV system than the system will produce in its lifetime. Thankfully, this is not the
case. Recent studies of energy payback time (EPBT) estimate that it takes a PV system one to three years to produce the same amount of energy that it took to manufacture it. Given that a PV system will continue to produce electricity for 30 years or more, a PV system’s lifetime production will far exceed the energy it took to produce it.

Here’s an in-depth look at the embodied energy along the way.
Module Manufacturing Methods
A batteryless grid-tied PV system has many parts-modules and mounts, inverter(s), and wiring components (including conduit, fittings, electrical boxes, wire, and overcurrent protection). Each part of a PV system takes energy to both produce and transport (embodied energy), but of all of them, the modules require the most energy to manufacture-about 93% of the entire system.
Single-crystal (monocrystalline)

PV cells are commonly manufactured using the Czochralski (CZ) method, where a “seed” silicon crystal is dipped into purified molten silicon and slowly raised out of the pot. As the seed crystal is raised, the molten silicon cools and solidifies into a single cylindrical crystal around and beneath the seed crystal. This process is referred to as “pulling” or “growing” an ingot. Thin slices-about 200 microns (0.008 inches) thick-are cut from the ingot and, with the addition of an antireflection coating and a wire grid to collect the electrons, become individual PV cells. To create a module, several cells are laid out and joined together electrically. Finally, the module is given a protective backing, topped with a glass
covering, and then sealed and framed with extruded aluminum.

Each step and material used in this manufacturing process requires energy. Purifying and melting the silicon uses a lot of heat energy. There is also a fair amount of energy used to make the aluminum module frame, as well as the coatings and glass. Purifying and growing the silicon crystal, along with the embodied energy of an aluminum frame, make up the lion’s share of energy involved in producing a single-crystal PV module.

In this series we’ll be talking about the different types of solar cells and manufacturing process and how they relate to the over all cost and savings for an average home owner.

But speaking of costs, you do realize that you can build your own solar panels for just a fraction of the cost of those built and installed by the large solar companies. It can make a fun weekend project for you and save you money both in materials and installation costs. The DIY Home solar Energy kits availalble have clear and easy to understand directions from the beginning to hooking up the renewable energy system to your homes power grid. Click the link above and explore the possibilities.