Solar energy works by capturing the sun’s energy
and turning it into electricity for your home or business.
Our sun is a natural nuclear reactor. It releases
tiny packets of energy called photons, which travel the 93 million miles from
the sun to Earth in about 8.5 minutes. Every hour, enough photons impact our
planet to generate enough solar energy to theoretically satisfy global energy
needs for an entire year.
Currently photovoltaic power accounts for only
five-tenths of one percent of the energy consumed in the United States. But
solar technology is improving and the cost of going solar is dropping rapidly,
so our ability to harness the sun’s abundance of energy is on the rise.
A 2017 report from the International Energy Agency
shows that solar has become the world’s fastest-growing source of power –
marking the first time that solar energy’s growth has surpassed that of all
other fuels. In the coming years, we will all be enjoying the benefits of
solar-generated electricity in one way or another.
Solar Panels
Photovoltaic (PV) solar panels are made up of many
solar cells. Solar cells are made of silicon, like semiconductors. They are
constructed with a positive layer and a negative layer, which together create
an electric field, just like in a battery.
When photons hit a solar cell, they knock
electrons loose from their atoms. If conductors are attached to the positive
and negative sides of a cell, it forms an electrical circuit. When electrons
flow through such a circuit, they generate electricity. Multiple cells make up
a solar panel, and multiple panels (modules) can be wired together to form a
solar array. The more panels you can deploy, the more energy you can expect to
generate.
Generate Electricity from
Solar Panels
PV solar panels generate direct current (DC)
electricity. With DC electricity, electrons flow in one direction around a
circuit. This example shows a battery powering a light bulb. The electrons move
from the negative side of the battery, through the lamp, and return to the
positive side of the battery.
With AC (alternating current) electricity,
electrons are pushed and pulled, periodically reversing direction, much like
the cylinder of a car’s engine. Generators create AC electricity when a coil of
wire is spun next to a magnet. Many different energy sources can “turn the
handle” of this generator, such as gas or diesel fuel, hydroelectricity,
nuclear, coal, wind, or solar.
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