Solar Ivy (or SMIT Grow) is a spectacular system of thin, fluttering solar panels that generate energy by sparkling in the sunlight. The wind and solar power generating photovoltaic leaves can be easily integrated on the side of a building to produce energy. The concept, designed by Brooklyn based SMIT (Sustainably Minded Interactive Technology), consists of a layer of thin-film material on top of polyethylene with a piezoelectric generator attached to each leaf. When the sun is shining or the wind is blowing, energy is being generated via Solar Ivy.
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Solar Ivy is a modular and customizable photovoltaic product with a wide range of applications. The “leaf” is roughly the size of a cantaloupe with
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http://www.vimeo.com/18956998 Francis Moon, a mechanical engineering professor at Cornell University, has designed a novel type of wind energy generator that vibrates in the wind rather than
9 Responses to “‘Solar Ivy’ Photovoltaic Leaves Climb to New Heights”
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Wow, now if that aint the coolest thing I ever seen!
RT
http://www.anonymize.tk
Seems more decorative than anything else. Not that that is bad but if you are looking for energy generaton I am not sure this is the way to go. I would prefer a living green wall to fluttering solar cells, myself.
will they hang there still, after an old fashoined automn storm??
but i do admit it is excellent publicity. great job.
[...] and 18 feet wide and has a nylon and polyethylene aluminum frame. It also features semi-flexible solar cells that can generate up to 2.4 kilowatts — enough to keep the blimp moving at 25 mph. The cells [...]
[...] serves three main purposes — first, power-rod extensions and wind catchers that resemble artificial leaves capture the wind and turn it into usable power. This technology was inspired by the research and [...]
[...] serves three main purposes — first, power-rod extensions and wind catchers that resemble artificial leaves capture the wind and turn it into usable power. This technology was inspired by the research and [...]
[...] flips the discomfort of the summer heat into an energy-saving advantage for the wintertime to a company that decided solar panels don’t have to be ugly, heavy or even rectangular. Read on to check out some of our favorite examples of emerging [...]
I just saw this creeping solar ivy last night, and now I find this. I was just thinking that it would be cool if there was a solar tree. That would be interesting, and entire tree with leaves of solar collectors, and the trunk is the AC/DC converter box, and then a “root” goes along underground and attaches to the house feeding it the extra electricity. Artistic, pretty, always green, and provides electricity. Neat idea.
This is so cool!I have explored solar power from several company’s only to find out that it was going to take 15-20
years to recoup my investment and it only produces powen when there is sunlight this is amazing I hope i can afford it!