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Future of Living Solar

Architecture and Electrical Engineering Students Design Fully-Solar Powered Homes for Competition

January 1, 2010

Architecture and electrical engineering students competed in an international challenge to create the most energy efficient, fully solar-powered home, without compromising on aesthetics and livability. The Solar Decathlon compared uniquely designed 800-square-foot homes from 20 college teams across the world. Each home was required to generate enough electricity and hot water to carry out typical functions like washing clothes and dishes and powering lights and electronics. Homes also needed to be zero energy- consuming no more than the same amount of energy they produced.

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Science Insider

ABOUT SOLAR CELLS: In the future, more homes will most likely incorporate solar cells, also known as photovoltaics. Solar cells are made of semiconductor materials (usually silicon), which absorb sunlight's energy and stores it until it is needed to power something. Unfortunately, present solar cells can only absorb between 15-25 percent of sunlight's energy. This is because it only absorbs visible light; other kinds of light pass right through the cell as if it were transparent.

HOW CAN HOMES CONSERVE ENERGY? There are many ways in which houses can conserve energy. Improvements in energy-efficient lighting can reduce power usage by as much as 65 percent. In fact, if every American household changed just five of the most-used lighting fixtures to energy-efficient technology, they would save a total of $6 billion in costs and reduce power usage by the equivalent of the annual output of more than 21 power plants. Many homes have high-performance, energy-efficient windows -- featuring double glazing or special coatings -- to reduce heat loss in cooler climates and heat gain in warmer climates. These two factors account for 50 percent of a home's heating and cooling needs. Replacing window frames with low-conductance materials like wood, vinyl and fiberglass can also improve a home's insulating capability

The Optical Society of America, The Materials Research Society, and The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.-USA,and the American Physical Society contributed to the information contained in the TV portion of this report.

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Solar Decathlon

To Go Inside This Science:

Tom Welch
U.S. Department of Energy
Washington, DC 20585
Phone: 202-586-4316
thomas.welch@hq.doe.gov

Optical Society of America
Washington, DC 20036-1023
202-223-8130
info@osa.org

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.
IEEE
IEEE-USA
Pender McCarter
p.mccarter@ieee.org

Materials Research Society
Warrendale, PA 15086-7573
724-779-3003
webmaster@mrs.org

James Riordon, Media Relations
American Physical Society
College Park, MD
301-209-3238
Riordon@aps.org