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History
of Solar
From ancient Greek homes built to
face the warm winter sun to advanced thin-film photovoltaics, which
generate electricity from the sun, humans have used the suns rays
to meet their energy needs. This makes sense, given that the sun
showers the earth every hour with enough energy to meet world demand
for a year. And the best part: this energy is pollution-free, inexhaustible
and accessible to many.
A Brief History of Solar Energy
Ancient Greeks and Romans saw great
benefit in what we now refer to as passive solar design the use
of architecture to make use of the suns capacity to light and heat
indoor spaces. The Greek philosopher Socrates wrote, In houses that
look toward the south, the sun penetrates the portico in winter.
Romans advanced the art by covering south facing building openings
with glass or mica to hold in the heat of the winter sun. Through
calculated use of the suns energy, Greeks and Romans offset the
need to burn wood that was often in short supply.
Auguste Mouchout, inventor of the
first active solar motor, questioned the widespread belief that
the fossil fuels powering the Industrial Revolution in the 19th
century would never run out. Eventually industry will no longer
find in Europe the resources to satisfy its prodigious expansion.
Coal will undoubtedly be used up. What will industry do then? Mouchout
asked prophetically.
In 1861, Mouchout developed a steam
engine powered entirely by the sun. But its high costs coupled with
the falling price of English coal doomed his invention to become
a footnote in energy history.
Nevertheless, solar energy continued
to intrigue and attract European scientists through the 19th century.
Scientists developed large cone-shaped collectors that could boil
ammonia to perform work like locomotion and refrigeration. France
and England briefly hoped that solar energy could power their growing
operations in the sunny colonies of Africa and East Asia .
In the United States , Swedish-born
John Ericsson led efforts to harness solar power. He designed the
parabolic trough collector, a technology which functions more than
a hundred years later on the same basic design. Ericsson is best
known for having conceived the USS Monitor, the armored ship integral
to the U.S. Civil War.
Solar power could boast few major
gains through the first half of the 20th century, though interest
in a solar-powered civilization never completely disappeared. In
fact, Albert Einstein was awarded the 1921 Nobel Prize in physics
for his research on the photoelectric effecta phenomenon central
to the generation of electricity through solar cells.
Some 50 years prior, William Grylls
Adams had discovered that when light was shined upon selenium, the
material shed electrons, thereby creating electricity.
In 1953, Bell Laboratories (now AT&T
labs) scientists Gerald Pearson, Daryl Chapin and Calvin Fuller
developed the first silicon solar cell capable of generating a measurable
electric current. The New York Times reported the discovery as the
beginning of a new era, leading eventually to the realization of
harnessing the almost limitless energy of the sun for the uses of
civilization.In 1956, solar photovoltaic (PV) cells were far from
economically practical. Electricity from solar cells ran about $300
per watt. (For comparison, current market rates for a watt of solar
PV hover around $5.) The Space Race of the 1950s and 60s gave modest
opportunity for progress in solar, as satellites and crafts used
solar paneling for electricity.
It was not until October 17, 1973
that solar leapt to prominence in energy research. The Arab Oil
Embargo demonstrated the degree to which the Western economy depended
upon a cheap and reliable flow of oil. As oil prices nearly doubled
over night, leaders became desperate to find a means of reducing
this dependence. In addition to increasing automobile fuel economy
standards and diversifying energy sources, the U.S. government invested
heavily in the solar electric cell that Bell Laboratories had produced
with such promise in 1953.
The hope in the 1970s was that through
massive investment in subsidies and research, solar photovoltaic
costs could drop precipitously and eventually become competitive
with fossil fuels.
By the 1990s, the reality was that
costs of solar energy had dropped as predicted, but costs of fossil
fuels had also droppedsolar was competing with a falling baseline.
However, huge PV market growth
in Japan and Germany from the 1990s to the present has reenergized
the solar industry. In 2002 Japan installed 25,000 solar rooftops.
Such large PV orders are creating economies of scale, thus steadily
lowering costs. The PV market is currently growing at a blistering
30 percent per year, with the promise of continually decreasing
costs. Meanwhile, solar thermal water heating is an increasingly
cost-effective means of lowering gas and electricity demand.
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