Residential solar power is on a sharp rise in the United States as
photovoltaic systems become cheaper and more powerful for homeowners. A
2012 study by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) predicts that solar
could reach 1 million to 3.8 million homes by 2020, a big leap from just
30,000 homes in 2006.
But that adoption rate could still use a boost, according to MIT
spinout Sistine Solar. "If you look at the landscape today, less than 1
percent of U.S. households have gone solar, so it's nowhere near mass
adoption," says co-founder Senthil Balasubramanian MBA '13.
Founded at the MIT Sloan School of Management, Sistine creates custom solar panels designed to mimic home facades and other environments, with aims of enticing more homeowners to install photovoltaic systems.
Sistine's novel technology, SolarSkin, is a layer that can be
imprinted with any image and embedded into a solar panel without
interfering with the panel's efficacy. Homeowners can match their
rooftop or a grassy lawn. Panels can also be fitted with business logos,
advertisements, or even a country's flag. SolarSkin systems cost about
10 percent more than traditional panel installations. But over the life
of the system, a homeowner can still expect to save more than $30,000,
according to the startup.
A winner of a 2013 MIT Clean Energy Prize, Sistine has recently
garnered significant media attention as a rising "aesthetic solar"
startup. Last summer, one of its pilot projects was featured on the
Lifetime television series "Designing Spaces," where the panels blended
in with the shingle roof of a log cabin in Hubbardston, Massachusetts.
In December, the startup installed its first residential SolarSkin
panels, in a 10-kilowatt system that matches a cedar pattern on a house
in Norwell, Massachusetts. Now, the Cambridge-based startup says it has
200 homes seeking installations, primarily in Massachusetts and
California, where solar is in high demand.
"We think SolarSkin is going to catch on like wildfire,"
Balasubramanian says. "There is a tremendous desire by homeowners to cut
utility bills, and solar is finding reception with them—and homeowners
care a lot about aesthetics."
Captivating people with solar
SolarSkin is the product of the co-founders' unique vision, combined with MIT talent that helped make the product a reality.
Balasubramanian came to MIT Sloan in 2011, after several years in the
solar-power industry, with hopes of starting his own solar-power
startup—a passion sha
One day, the two were brainstorming at the Muddy Charles Pub, when a
surprisingly overlooked issue popped up: Homeowners, they heard, don't
really like the look of solar panels. That began a nebulous business
mission to "captivate people's imaginations and connect people on an
emotional level with solar," Balasubramanian says.
Recruiting Jonathan Mailoa, then a PhD student in MIT's Photovoltaic
Research Laboratory, and Samantha Holmes, a mosaic artist trained in
Italy who is still with the startup, the four designed solar panels that
could be embedded on massive sculptures and other 3-D objects. They
took the idea to 15.366 (Energy Ventures), where "it was drilled into
our heads that you have to do a lot of market testing before you build a
product," Balasubramanian says.
That was a good thing, too, he adds, because they realized their
product wasn't scalable. "We didn't want to make a few installations
that people talk about. … We [wanted to] make solar so prevalent that
within our lifetime we can see the entire world convert to 100 percent
clean energy," Balasubramanian says.
The team's focus then shifted to manufacturing solar panels that
could match building facades or street fixtures such as bus shelters and
information kiosks. In 2013, the idea earned the team—then officially
Sistine Solar—a modest DOE grant and a $20,000 prize from the MIT Clean
Energy Prize competition, "which was a game-changer for us,"
Balasubramanian says.
But, while trying to construct custom-designed panels, another idea
struck: Why not just make a layer to embed into existing solar panels?
Recruiting MIT mechanical engineering student Jody Fu, Sistine created
the first SolarSkin prototype in 2015, leading to pilot projects for
Microsoft, Starwood Hotels, and other companies in the region.
That summer, after earning another DOE grant for $1 million, Sistine
recruited Anthony Occidentale, an MIT mechanical engineering student who
has since helped further advance SolarSkin. "We benefited from the
incredible talent at MIT," Balasubramanian says. "Anthony is a shining
example of someone who resonates with our vision and has all the tools
to make this a reality."
Imagination is the limit
SolarSkin is a layer that employs selective light filtration to
display an image while still transmitting light to the underlying solar
cells. The ad wraps displayed on bus windows offer a good analogy: The
wraps reflect some light to display an image, while allowing the
remaining light through so passengers inside the bus can see out.
SolarSkin achieves a similar effect—"but the innovation lies in using a
minute amount of light to reflect an image [and preserve] a
high-efficiency solar module," Balasubramanian says.
To achieve this, Occidentale and others at Sistine have developed
undisclosed innovations in color science and human visual perception.
"We've come up with a process where we color-correct the minimal
information we have of the image on the panels to make that image
appear, to the human eye, to be similar to the surrounding backdrop of
roof shingles," Occidentale says.
As for designs, Sistine has amassed a database of common rooftop
patterns in the United States, such as asphalt shingles, clay tiles, and
slate, in a wide variety of colors. "So if a homeowner says, for
instance, 'We have manufactured shingles in a barkwood pattern,' we have
a matching design for that," he says. Custom designs aren't as popular,
but test projects include commercial prints for major companies, and
even Occidentale's face on a panel.
Currently, Sistine is testing SolarSkin for efficiency, durability,
and longevity at the U.S. National Renewable Energy Laboratory under a
DOE grant.
The field of aesthetic solar is still nascent, but it's growing, with
major companies such as Tesla designing entire solar-panel roofs. But,
as far as Balasubramanian knows, Sistine is the only company that's made
a layer that can be integrated into any solar panel, and that can
display any color as well as intricate patterns and actual images.
Companies could thus use SolarSkin solar panels to double as business
signs. Municipalities could install light-powering solar panels on
highways that blend in with the surrounding nature. Panels with
changeable advertisements could be placed on bus shelters to charge cell
phones, information kiosks, and other devices. "You can start putting
solar in places you typically didn't think of before," Balasubramanian
says. "Imagination is really the only limit with this technology."
SOURCE:
TechXplore and Provided by
Massachusetts Institute of Technology



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