Researchers at the U.S. Naval Research
Laboratory Electronics Science and Technology Division are working to help the U.S. Marine
Corps (USMC) reduce expeditionary energy
supply needs and risks and increase the effectiveness of forward deployed
forces.
“One of the most significant challenges
currently facing the Marine Corps is the need to supply sufficient electricity
to individual Marines in forward operating bases,” said Robert Walters, head,
NRL Solid State Devices Branch. “Mobile photovoltaics are a technology that can
address these needs by leveraging emerging, flexible, high efficiency
photovoltaic technology.”
The military’s need to reduce both fuel
and battery resupply is a real time requirement for increasing combat
effectiveness and decreasing vulnerability.
The overarching objective of the USMC Expeditionary Energy Strategy is
to increase operational energy efficiency on the battlefield through the
combination of on-installation alternative energy production and energy demand
reduction.
This subsequently is projected to reduce
fuel consumed, per Marine, per day, by 50 percent and reduce total weight of
batteries carried by nearly 200 thousand pounds.
It has been recognized that photovoltaic
(PV) cells are essentially the only renewable energy source that can meet this
challenge. NRL, in collaboration with MicroLink Devices, Design Intelligence
Incorporated, and the USMC Expeditionary Energy Office (E2O), have developed
and prototyped a new photovoltaic system to meet the unique needs of USMC Expeditionary
Power for robust, high-efficiency solar panels suitable for adaptation to
rechargeable batteries in the field.
The mobile solar power (MSP) prototype,
capitalizing on recent advances in solar cell technology that allow the
manufacture of high-efficiency, flexible solar cells, consists of an array of
single-junction solar cells with a power conditioning circuit that maximizes
array power production and charges a standard, military issue, high capacity
rechargeable lithium-ion battery (BB-2590).
Flexible solar cells with light to
electricity conversion efficiency as high as 30 percent have been demonstrated
in multi-cell panels and although field tests are still in progress, initial
modeling, simulation, and experimentation of the nearly 150 square-inch
deployed array have shown considerable promise toward future progress,
producing more than 11 Watts per 1-sun air mass (AM) 1.5 illumination.
Story provided by the Naval Research
Laboratory
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