IICM

IICM-Innovative Ideas & Creative Minds is a technological community of the Electronics & Communication dept of Pragati Engineering College initiated with a main view of providing a platform for the creative minds of Pragati. The forum was initiated by the pragatians-Divya Sri,Mounica Deepthi,Praveena,Anuradha. Officially launched by the dignitaries of Pragati on Jan10th 2008.

Saturday, August 23, 2008

Electrifying Curtains for Your Home using Solar Textiles:

Ever thought the curtains in your house are not bright enough? Researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology have created designs for flexible photovoltaic materials, known as solar textiles that can also be draped as curtains, which may change the way buildings receive and distribute energy. According to a report in Science Daily, these new materials work like the now-familiar photovoltaic cells in solar panels made of semiconductor materials, they absorb sunlight and convert it into electricity. To design the solar textiles, Sheila Kennedy, an expert in the integration of solar cell technology in architecture, from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, used a 3-Dmodelling software. This software generated membrane-like surfaces that can become energy-efficient cladding for roofs or walls.Surfaces that define space can also be producers of energy’, said Kennedy. ‘The boundaries between traditional walls and utilities are shifting’, she added. A recent project, ‘Soft House’, exhibited at the Vitra Design Museum in Essen, Germany, illustrates what Kennedy means when she says the boundaries between walls and utilities are changing. For Soft House, Kennedy transformed household curtains into mobile, flexible energy-harvesting surfaces with integrated solid-state lighting. Soft House curtains move to follow the sun in order to get sufficient sun-rays and can generate up to 16,000 watt-hours of electricity – more than half the daily power needs of an average American household. In the backdrop of increasing demand of electricity and limited sources of fossil fuels, this type of solar textiles would certainly help the people. Source: The Times of India, June 25, 2008.

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