Although solar cells are proving indispensable for powering things such as electronic sensors on dry land, sensors located underwater have typically had to rely on batteries, or electricity piped in from photovoltaic panels situated above the surface. That could be changing, however, as scientists from the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory have recently developed functioning underwater solar cells.
Water absorbs much of the spectrum of sunlight – blue-green light is the last portion of the spectrum to be absorbed, and thus penetrates the farthest below the surface. Because traditional topside silicon solar cells are designed around the full solar spectrum, this leaves them little to work with when placed underwater.
It turns out, however, that gallium indium phosphide (GaInP) cells are highly efficient at converting light within the less intense blue-green wavelength into electricity. When used at depth underwater, GaInP cells receive nothing but the wavelength that they are optimized for, allowing them to perform much better than regular silicon cells under the same conditions.
So far, it has been determined that GaInP cells placed at a maximum depth of 9.1 meters (29.9 feet) provide an output of 7 watts per square meter (10.8 sq ft) – enough to power a device such as an environmental sensor.
Source: U.S. Naval Research Laboratory
There are ways of controlling algae growth. The question is one of economics, is it more cost effective to pay for insurance and lost productivity, or to pay for the algae control.
WHAT ARE THEY THINKING OF?
China, who is Australia's largest buyer of coal, is going solar as much as they can and building huge solar plants for the future! What then for Australia's coal industry?
The Holden car manufacturing plant in Adelaide is closing in a couple of years throwing thousands out of work, so why can't the aforesaid idiot throw his billions into solar technology and use some of the workers from there, if not right no, then later?
No no, coal is too easy!!! Heaven protect us from these idiots.