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Dust, dirt, and the occasional bird-bomb can chip away
at the efficiency of solar panels. Hand washing is fine for home-scale
installations but that can add up to a huge problem for large installations that
cover multiple acres of ground or roofs. Now scientists from Boston University
have come up with a solution: self-cleaning solar panels based on
technology used in missions to Mars. 
The problem of dust-clogged solar panels is exacerbated by
the tendency to site large-scale installations in desert areas, where water for
washing is scarce and windswept dust can accumulate for long periods without
rain to wash it away. The hunt is on for low cost, high efficiency ways to keep
the panels clean without expending more energy in the process.
Dust and Solar Panels
According to Boston
University scientist
Malay K. Mazumder, it doesn’t take much dust to interfere with solar panel
performance. Solar power conversion can decrease by 40 percent with just
a fraction of an ounce of dust per square yard, and the dust deposition rate is
much higher than that in many areas that are favored for large-scale solar
installations.
Leading the Charge to Self Cleaning Solar Panels
Dr. Mazumder’s team worked with NASA to develop
self-cleaning solar panels for space missions. They work by covering the panels
with a sheet of transparent plastic or glass, which is coated with an
electrically sensitive material. When sensors detect a certain concentration of
dust, the charge is tripped and an electrical “wave” pushes the dust to the
edges of the screen. The solar panels themselves provide the electricity for
the cleaning process. A company called XeroCoat has also come up
with anti-reflective solar coatings that can be deposited directly
onto thin film solar panels, which are designed to resist soil and dust.
Source: Cleantechnica
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