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Windows and other clear surfaces will generate power with UCLA’s transparent chip concept

At UCLA they’ve been busy working on new types of solar energy concepts. This time: a transparent solar cell that feeds off infrared rays instead of visible light. The manufacturing process for this chip is actually cheaper than the normal process for solar energy devices, but so far has only gotten a 4% efficiency despite its economic efficiency.

There’s a ways to go before the commercialization of the transparent chips becomes a reality, but since they are potentially transparent enough to somehow install inside of our own windows, there’s much hope that these little chips will be a great success in green energy.

UCLA professor Yang Yang who’s the head of the project said he, “[doesn’t] have the patience to wait much longer,” and estimates that “in five years [the scientists will] have something on a small scale, and then in 10 years it will be popular.”

(via Geek.com & Dvice.com)

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kaitlinduffy

Kaitlin Duffy is a writer from Cleveland. When she's not blogging or pondering the great complexities of the world and outer space, she is finding rare vinyl steals, visiting new places, laughing often, Instagramming everything in sight, watching movies, or working on her first feature Port de Cleve.