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Technology and R&D

Solar on US canals moves closer to reality

Project Nexus expects to break ground on a canal-top solar project in the fall, with completion targeted by the end of 2023.

Aluminum-sulfur battery for small-scale storage at $8.99/kWh

Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers have developed a battery with two electrodes made of aluminum and sulfur, and a molten salt electrolyte placed between them. They said the sulfur electrodes with a high loading of 12.0 mg cm2 can sustain a high capacity of 520 mAh g–1 over 100 cycles at 5 C.

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GAF Energy breaks ground on US solar roofing factory

GAF Energy said its new production facility in Georgetown, Texas, will create hundreds of renewable energy jobs.

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Predicting solar power output with limited data sizes

Researchers in Greece have developed three different transfer-learning strategies for solar power forecasting. The techniques are based on a stacked long short-term memory model, which is a kind of recurrent neural network that can learn order dependence in sequence prediction problems.

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Ammonia heat pump for wastewater

Aalborg CSP will connect a 2.5 MW ammonia heat pump to a district heating system operated by E.ON Denmark. The facility will be located at a local wastewater treatment plant.

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Grid-forming inverter to stabilize microgrids

Toshiba has developed a smart synchronous inverter that stabilizes power fluctuations in microgrids. The Japanese company said it has tested the device in combination with PV and battery storage.

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Airbus solar airplane crashes after 64 days of flying

The 25-meter-wide Airbus solar drone, which is remotely controlled by satellite, is entirely covered with PV modules.

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Hydrostor develops 500 MW/4 GWh compressed air storage project in California

Hydrostor has selected an engineering company to provide front-end studies for a 500 MW compressed air energy storage project in California.

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US utility to demonstrate liquid metal long-duration storage at solar test site

US utility Xcel Energy will test the use of Ambri’s energy storage technology at the Solar Technology Acceleration Center.

The weekend read: Historical and landmarked buildings turn to solar amid changing policies, rising prices

The urgency of rooftop solar uptake has only been accelerated by the current energy crisis, but the spread of PV to historic and landmarked buildings remains limited. In Europe, historic buildings constructed before 1945 represent at least a quarter of total building stock. To boost uptake, some municipalities are considering a loosening of their protection policies, while researchers are finding interesting byways for installation. Furthermore, building integrated PV solutions are being touted as the ideal compromise between aesthetic continuity and new generation opportunities.

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