National Semi: Now Touting Solar Stuff
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Hardly a day goes by without another tech name becoming a solar technology inventor. Yesterday’s debut was from National Semiconductor (NSM), a long-time maker of humble analog circuitry sold into numerous electronic devices. The company put out a press release this afternoon about a new technology to aid solar panel design, and Briefing.com notes that the stock was up 36 cents, almost 2%, after hours, at $20.90, after National’s chief executive, Brian Halla, appeared on CNBC after market close.
National’s “SolarMagic,” as the part is called, is not itself a solar panel technology, rather its a chip that can, as National puts it, recoup 50% of energy that’s typically lost in solar cells when dust or shadow falls across the panel. There’s not a lot of detail on the press release about how this magical device works, but I assume we’ll be hearing much more about it.
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This article has 3 comments:
By having circuitry that is equivalent to voltage monitoring, diodes to prevent current flow in "reverse" directions, isolation circuits, etc. the array is "balanced" to maintain overall effective output by preventing these "sapping" effects.
BTW, for accuracy's sake, the PR said as hihg as 44%, not 50% and a lab environment yielded an overall 12% gain.
Certainly a useful result.
The more important effect is that it increases the coverage to installations that may not have previously met minimum qualifications for use of PV arrays. That effect *may* provide enough gain in price points (through higher volumes and more wats per $ at less-optimal sites) to provide a noticable acceleration in PV usage growth. Depends on how widespread the adoption of the device is among installtions.
I would think this technology more appropriate to correct mismatches in the individual modules that make up a panel as they age.
Peter