1 min read

Bill Nye Gives Support for Revolutionary Solar Company

Bill Nye “The Science Guy” is considered one of the coolest guys in the science world. Now, Bill Nye is turning his attention to a new solar technology that could cut the cost of panels by 60% according to Inhabitat. 

Rayton Solar has devised a system that cuts Float Zone Silicone, a critical component of solar panels, with a particle accelerator. The groundbreaking technique results in less waste and lower cost, making solar power more financially competitive than traditional fossil fuels.

Solar panels are basically made with silicon, but the usual process to cut silicon results in a lot of waste. By using a particle accelerator, Rayton Solar uses 50 to 100 times less silicon than other industrial processes. As silicon is the most expensive ingredient of a solar panel, Rayton Solar’s process grants them to make solar panels that are 605 cheaper. The type of silicon they cut makes a difference too, because Float Zone Silicon is the highest grade and the type NASA uses on their projects.

According to Rayton Solar CEO and founder, Andrew Yakub wants to make the renewable energy cost-effective without subsidies. He also said that with their process, subsidies are not required for solar energy to be the most affordable source of energy.

Bill Nye compared the current climactic moment in history to that of when oil took over coal as the primary source of energy a century ago. He said that humanity is standing on the cusp of a new era in which the paradigm for energy is changing. The opportunity to support a disruptive solar technology represents a path to enabling change to a renewable future and an investment with very promising economic prospects.

Click here to read the story on Inhabitat

Featured Image Credit: Inhabitat.com

Sonnenwagen Aachem and Covestro Team up for Australian Solar Race

A group of students at RWTH Aachen University and Aachen University of Applied Sciences has dedicated their efforts to the development of a...

Read More

Breakthrough Solar Cell Converts CO2 into Fuel

Solar Daily reported that researchers at the University of Illinois in Chicago have engineered a potentially game-changing solar cell that cheaply...

Read More

Electron Science Research Institute Team Has Created Energy-harvesting Glass

A new technology developed in Western Australia is making its mark on the solar energy market by making the world’s first solar commercially viable...

Read More