It is common knowledge that if your solar panels can track the sun, their energy output can increase by as much as 30–40%. In spite of this, only a small number of solar PV installations use trackers.
Mostly, the problem is that sun trackers are bulky and can also be costly when it comes to residential rooftop installations. Moreover, they work by tilting the whole panel – which is difficult to do on pitched roofs.
According to an NREL report (Estimating Rooftop Suitability for PV), pitched roofs are in a majority when it comes to residential solar rooftops. And would require significant reinforcing to support the weight of conventional sun-tracking systems.
Researchers from the University of Michigan have shown a new way to help solar cells track the sun by fusing art with science. They have demonstrated that kirigami structures combined with thin-film active materials can be used as a simple, low-cost, lightweight, and low-profile method to track the sun’s position, thereby maximizing the generated energy.
The work was published in the journal Nature Communications.
To the uninitiated, Kirigami is a variation of origami that includes cutting of the paper (from Japanese “kiru” = to cut, “kami” = paper), rather than solely folding the paper as is the case with origami.
Researchers have shown that by cutting solar cells into specific designs (inspired from kirigami), they can allow the cells to track the sun’s angle without having to tilt the whole panel.
By borrowing from kirigami, the ancient Japanese art of paper cutting, researchers at the University of Michigan have developed solar cells that can track the sun. A flat plastic sheet backing the solar cells splits into wavy, connected ribbons when stretched. The tilt of the cells depends on the stretching, a simple mechanism for tracking the sun across the sky. Image credit: Aaron LamoureuxApplying a specific kirigami cut (like rows of dashes) creates strips in a solar cell. Pulling the two ends in opposite directions causes the cell to be pulled apart into a basic mesh, and the strips tilt to assume the desired angle to an accuracy of about one degree.
When the cell with cut strips is stretched, the surface can twist over an angle of 120 degrees so that it can face towards the sun. According to the research team’s simulations of solar power generation during the summer solstice in Arizona, the kirigami cell is “as good as a conventional single-axis tracker,” offering a 36% improvement over a stationary panel.
The research team tried several complex designs, and the simplest pattern was reported to perform the best.
The design comes with some natural advantages. When the ‘transformed’ cell is facing the sun, the strips do not cast a shadow on the others,, and since the effective aperture area remains the same, the bending of the strips should not affect its output.
Once the Kirigami panels have been developed as a finished product, they would possibly weigh less, making them attractive for airborne uses.
Also, as several studies have highlighted, aesthetics is quite important when it comes to rooftop installations. Thankfully, the clever design does not only generate more electricity than its flat-panel counterparts but looks more appealing as well.
At this point, you are probably teeming with questions — can the cell material withstand the cyclic stretching consistently? What about temperature fluctuations (daily/seasonally)? What hardware will actually be required to stretch and morph the solar cells in actual deployment?
Before you jump to point out flaws with the idea, do consider that the current work has only been reported as a proof of principle. Moving towards a commercial application will take a lot more effort!
To create a working product, at the minimum, the cells need to be encased in a structure which will protect them from the weather and also provide mechanical support. Additionally, electric motors will be required for the tracking mechanism to work.
As per the paper published in Nature Communications journal, the authors did consider the effects of strain and cycling for long-term solar tracking by performing accelerated tests. They concluded that by optimizing the cut geometry and thus minimizing stress at the cuts, it is possible to significantly decrease strain fade.
While Kapton (a space-grade plastic) was used as the substrate for current work, other materials with improved mechanical and thermal stabilities (for example, spring steel) are also being investigated as more robust materials platforms with longer operational lifetimes.
Though the idea has a potential to make rooftop solar much more efficient, in the near term the researchers say that it would be more feasible for smaller aerospace applications.
If you have been keeping an eye on technology updates, then you would have surely seen a number of other recent innovations using kirigami.
A few weeks back, scientists at Arizona State University used kirigami to create (prototypes of) flexible batteries that can be stretched to more than 150% of their original size and still maintain full functionality.
The battery was sewn into an elastic wristband that was attached to a smart watch. It could power the watch and its functions – including playing video – as the band was being stretched. Check out the video at this link.
Around the same time, physicists at Cornell University took kirigami down to the nanoscale — creating them from one atom thick graphene sheets — possibly fabricating some of the smallest machines the world has ever known. More on this over here.
Source: CleanTechnica. Reproduced with permission.
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