Better Technology For Developing Plastic Solar Cells Created

Posted by: Martin  :  Category: News

plastic-solar-cells

Liscio, a researcher at the Istituto per la Sintesi Organica e la Fotoreattività - Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR) in Bologna, Italy is working in the SUPRAMATES collaborative research project and is using an analytical technique based on a powerful type of microscopy, to analyse materials and map their electrical properties with nanoscopic detail.

Liscio explained how he and his colleagues are using Kelvin Probe Force Microscopy (KPFM), which is an extension of atomic force microscopy, and is 1000 times more powerful than an optical microscope.

He presented details of a systematic study of KPFM measurements of nanostructures. “We studied an extensive range of samples and structures with sizes spanning from several micrometres down to a few nanometres,” explained Liscio, “Our results indicated that by operating the KPFM at high frequencies it is possible to visualize different electrical behaviour in nanostructured samples.”

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G8 leaders planting trees video

Posted by: Martin  :  Category: News, Videos

G8 leaders planting trees video

Cleaner skies explain surprise rate of warming

Posted by: Martin  :  Category: Air pollution, News

cleaner-sky

GOODBYE air pollution and smoky chimneys, hello brighter days. That’s been the trend in Europe for the past three decades - but unfortunately cleaning up the skies has allowed more of the sun’s rays to pierce the atmosphere, contributing to at least half the warming that has occurred.

Since 1980, average air temperatures in Europe have risen 1 °C: much more than expected from greenhouse-gas warming alone. Christian Ruckstuhl of the Institute for Atmospheric and Climate Science in Switzerland and colleagues took aerosol concentrations from six locations in northern Europe, measured between 1986 and 2005, and compared them with solar-radiation measurements over the same period. Aerosol concentrations dropped by up to 60 per cent over the 29-year period, while solar radiation rose by around 1 watt per square metre (Geophysical Research Letters, DOI: 10.1029/2008GL034228). “The decrease in aerosols probably accounts for at least half of the warming over Europe in the last 30 years,” says Rolf Philipona, a co-author of the study at MeteoSwiss, Switzerland’s national weather service.

The latest climate models are built on the assumption that aerosols have their biggest influence by seeding natural clouds, which reflect sunlight. However, the team found that radiation dropped only slightly on cloudy days, suggesting that the main impact of aerosols is to block sunlight directly.

Photo of the day: G8 leaders planting trees

Posted by: Martin  :  Category: News

Not so many times you see that kind of view :)

Lithuanian IKI supermarket started selling eco bags

Posted by: Martin  :  Category: Lithuanian Eco, News

iki-eco-bag

That words “As myliu gamta” on the bag in English means “I love nature” (Martin)

Engaged in environmental protection for over ten years by now, Group IKI is the first
In Lithuania to provide buyers with a possibility to reduce environmental pollution caused by
huge quantities of disposed bags. IKI stores all over the country offer its customers
to acquire multiple use shopping bags which can be used by shoppers for up to
two years, while worn bags will be replaced with new ones free of charge.

Dumpsites will “go slimmer”

According to Director of Commerce of IKI Group Mr. Tomas Vaišvila, environmental issues for Lithuanians
are more important than it may seem at first sight.
“Polls show that more than half of the population would make their personal contribution to
climate problem solution. Unfortunately, suitable conditions for waste sorting cannot be found everywhere.
Therefore, we believe that our shopping bags should become a convenient solution for citizens
concerned about pollution”, told Mr. T. Vaišvila.
Refusal of plastic bags would be a real and significant step towards cleaner
environment – it was calculated that if at least half of IKI buyers did not use conventional shopping
bags, two times less used plastic bags, i.e. about 118 t would be disposed at dumpsites.
With introduction of this novelty, at least every second IKI customer is expected to fall out of a habit to use
plastic bags in the nearest future.

Some Plants Can Adapt To Widespread Climate Change

Posted by: Martin  :  Category: News

plants

The experiment on which the study is based is one of the longest-running studies of climate change impacts on natural vegetation and may yield new insights into the effects of global warming on plant ecosystems.

“Contemporary wisdom suggests that climate changes cause plants to move or die,” says Jason Fridley, study co-author and assistant professor of biology in The College of Arts and Sciences at SU. “However, our study suggests that if the changes in climate occur slowly enough, some plants have the ability to respond, adapt and thrive in their existing location.”

The new findings resulted from the analysis of 13 years of data collected at the Buxton Climate Change Impacts Laboratory (BCCIL) in the United Kingdom by Emeritus Professor J. Philip Grime and colleagues at the University of Sheffield. Established in 1989, BCCIL is a field laboratory of grasslands consisting largely of slow-growing herbs and sub-shrubs, many of which are more than 100 years old. As many as 50 different species of plants per square meter survive the region’s hostile conditions by growing in shallow soil and in the nooks and crannies of limestone outcrops. The data analysis was supported by a grant Fridley obtained from the National Science Foundation.

The 13-year experiment at BCCIL involved subjecting 30 small grassland plots to microclimate manipulation. For example, some plots received 20 percent more water than normal during the summer, while other plots were covered with rain shelters in the summer to simulate drought conditions; heating cables were placed under some plots to simulate winter warming. The grasses in all of the plots were cut to simulate annual sheep grazing. A similar experiment was concurrently conducted on grasslands in Southern England for the first five years.

Data collected from the northern and southern sites was the subject of a study published by Grime and colleagues in Science (2000). In the 2000 study, the vegetation in the southern plots was substantially altered by the climate changes, while the Buxton vegetation in the north was virtually unaffected. The southern experiment was dismantled, but Grime continued the experiment on the Buxton plots.

“Based on the results of the five-year experiment, we suspected there was something unique happening in the northern grasslands that enabled the plants to resist simulated climate changes,” Fridley says. “We formed two hypotheses — the plants will eventually be affected, but it will take longer due to chronic nutrient shortage; or the grasslands won’t change regardless of how long we manipulate the environment. All of our analysis suggested that the grassland ecosystem is stable, despite the climate manipulations.”

The new results have yielded more questions than answers; foremost is why are some plants resistant to climate change, while others die, become extinct or migrate to other places? The answers may lie in the nature and behavior of the individual plants within a species.

“Individual plants may die or contract,” Fridley says, “but perhaps they are replaced by those of the same species that are more adapted to the environmental changes. The closer we look, the more complex the systems become. There is actually a lot going on, but we may be missing it because we are looking at a broad spectrum of species instead of what is happening at the level of the individual plants within a species.”

Concerns for Olympics is Air and Access

Posted by: Martin  :  Category: Air pollution, News

beijing-strong-pollution

With a month remaining before the Beijing Olympics, the International Olympic Committee on Tuesday praised the city’s preparations but also cited two “open issues” that remain: whether the city can deliver good air quality and fulfill promises to allow television networks to broadcast from non-Olympic sites.

“We think we’ve done everything,” said Hein Verbruggen, chairman of the I.O.C.’s Coordination Commission, in a telephone interview. “But now we have to see in practice how it will work.”

Pollution and media access remain uncertainties as Beijing hustles to finish construction projects, plant flowers and get the city ready for the Aug. 8 opening ceremonies. On Tuesday, Beijing organizers christened the two state-of-the-art Olympic media centers, which will house more than 20,000 journalists during the Games.

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UK company invents inflatable solar panel

Posted by: Martin  :  Category: News

inflatable_solar_panel

Industrial Design Consultancy, a UK based sustainable product designe, has unveiled an inflatable solar collector called SolarStore.

The SolarStore harnesses the sun’s natural energy to warm domestic water and can heat up to three full tanks of water per day at temperatures close to 80°C.

For consumers in the UK, the SolarStore could provide a cheap source of domestic hot water; with an initial cost of under £100 per product, trial data has shown that the system will pay for itself in only 6 months. This compares favourably to conventional domestic solar hot water systems, which cost in the region of £2000-3000 and have payback times of around 10-20 years.

It is anticipated that the product could be beneficial in developing countries, where a reliable electricity supply can be a problem. Other applications for the SolarStore include hot water for camping and caravanning holidays or for hot water in remote locations.

When deflated, it is small enough to fit into a rucksack, yet SolarStore inflates to nearly 2m2 for maximum solar absorption. SolarStore works by allowing sunlight to pass through a clear outer layer to a black inner layer which holds the water. By a process of heat transfer, the water is then heated up. The surrounding air between the clear and black layers then acts as insulation to help keep the heat in.

Although the SolarStore is inflatable, the structure of the system is strong and robust and it is anchored down by the weight of 30 litres of water. It is manufactured from a heavy-duty polymer that is designed to protect against dirt and rain. SolarStore is an eco-friendly solution, which saves nearly 0.2 tonnes of CO2 emissions each year.

By GreenTech