While roofs across the world sport photovoltaic solar panels to convert  sunlight into electricity, a Duke University engineer believes a novel  hybrid system can wring even more useful energy out of the sun's rays.
nstead of systems based on standard solar panels, Duke engineer Nico  Hotz proposes a hybrid option in which sunlight heats a combination of  water and methanol in a maze of glass tubes on a rooftop. After two  catalytic reactions, the system produces hydrogen much more efficiently  than current technology without significant impurities. The resulting  hydrogen can be stored and used on demand in fuel cells.For his analysis, Hotz compared the hybrid system to three different  technologies in terms of their exergetic performance. Exergy is a way of  describing how much of a given quantity of energy can theoretically be  converted to useful work.
"The hybrid system achieved exergetic efficiencies of 28.5 percent in  the summer and 18.5 percent in the winter, compared to 5 to 15 percent  for the conventional systems in the summer, and 2.5 to 5 percent in the  winter," said Hotz, assistant professor of mechanical engineering and  materials science at Duke's Pratt School of Engineering.
The paper describing the results of Hotz's analysis was named the top  paper during the ASME Energy Sustainability Fuel Cell 2011 conference  in Washington, D.C. Hotz recently joined the Duke faculty after  completing post-graduate work at the University of California-Berkeley,  where he analyzed a model of the new system. He is currently  constructing one of the systems at Duke to test whether or not the  theoretical efficiencies are born out experimentally.
 Hotz's comparisons took place during the months of July and February  in order to measure each system's performance during summer and winter  months.
Like other solar-based systems, the hybrid system begins with the  collection of sunlight. Then things get different. While the hybrid  device might look like a traditional solar collector from the distance,  it is actually a series of copper tubes coated with a thin layer of  aluminum and aluminum oxide and partly filled with catalytic  nanoparticles. A combination of water and methanol flows through the  tubes, which are sealed in a vacuum.
 "This set-up allows up to 95 percent of the sunlight to be absorbed  with very little being lost as heat to the surroundings," Hotz said.  "This is crucial because it permits us to achieve temperatures of well  over 200 degrees Celsius within the tubes. By comparison, a standard  solar collector can only heat water between 60 and 70 degrees Celsius."
Once the evaporated liquid achieves these higher temperatures, tiny  amounts of a catalyst are added, which produces hydrogen. This  combination of high temperature and added catalysts produces hydrogen  very efficiently, Hotz said. The resulting hydrogen can then be  immediately directed to a fuel cell to provide electricity to a building  during the day, or compressed and stored in a tank to provide power  later.
The three systems examined in the analysis were the standard  photovoltaic cell which converts sunlight directly into electricity to  then split water electrolytically into hydrogen and oxygen; a  photocatalytic system producing hydrogen similar to Hotz's system, but  simpler and not mature yet; and a system in which photovoltaic cells  turn sunlight into electricity which is then stored in different types  of batteries (with lithium ion being the most efficient).
 "We performed a cost analysis and found that the hybrid  solar-methanol is the least expensive solution, considering the total  installation costs of $7,900 if designed to fulfill the requirements in  summer, although this is still much more expensive than a conventional  fossil fuel-fed generator," Hotz said.
 Costs and efficiencies of systems can vary widely depending on  location -- since the roof-mounted collectors that could provide all the  building's needs in summer might not be enough for winter. A rooftop  system large enough to supply all of a winter's electrical needs would  produce more energy than needed in summer, so the owner could decide to  shut down portions of the rooftop structure or, if possible, sell excess  energy back to the grid.
"The installation costs per year including the fuel costs, and the  price per amount of electricity produced, however showed that the  (hybrid) solar scenarios can compete with the fossil fuel-based system  to some degree," Hotz said. 'In summer, the first and third scenarios,  as well as the hybrid system, are cheaper than a propane- or  diesel-combusting generator."
This could be an important consideration, especially if a structure  is to be located in a remote area where traditional forms of energy  would be too difficult or expensive to obtain.
 Hotz's research was supported by the Swiss National Science Fund.  Joining him in the study were UC-Berkeley's Heng Pan and Costas  Grigoropoulos, as well as Seung H. Ko of the Korea Advanced Institute of  Science and Technology, Daejon.
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