A solar film made from Vegetables

Carvey Ehren Maigue is a student at Mapua University in the Philippines. Maigue used luminescent particles from fruit and vegetable waste.

 

These are the same particles that absorb the Sun’s ultraviolet rays and turn them into visible light. By using particles like this, Maigue created a solar film capable of capturing ultraviolet rays. The film then converts the rays into visible light which is used to generate energy.

 

 

The material could be applied to entire buildings such as the Montreal Convention Centre.
The material could be applied to entire buildings such as the Montreal Convention Centre.  The James Dyson Foundation

Solar panels that don’t require direct sunlight have been invented in another leap forwards for clean energy.

A Filipino engineering student designed the revolutionary material using luminescent particles from fruit and vegetable waste.

Carvey Ehren Maigue, 29, won the James Dyson Foundation Sustainability Award in 2020 for the panels he constructed at Mapua University in the Philippines.

The New solar panels don’t need sunlight to generate energy.

As they do inside crops, these particles absorb the sun’s ultraviolet rays and turn them into visible light. The panels are then able to convert this harvested light into electricity.

The James Dyson Foundation
Maigue said he was inspired by Elon Musk and how he “he blazed a trail for his solution to reach the market.”The James Dyson Foundation

Ultraviolet rays still reach us on cloudy days, meaning there is huge potential to scale the technology up in urban areas – as well as in other places that a conventional solar panel wouldn’t sit.

##energy #solar #film #cleanenergy #sustainability #innovation #climate #environment #netzerocarbon

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