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661 lines
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(word processor parameters LM=8, RM=75, TM=2, BM=2)
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Taken from KeelyNet BBS (214) 324-3501
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Sponsored by Vangard Sciences
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PO BOX 1031
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Mesquite, TX 75150
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There are ABSOLUTELY NO RESTRICTIONS
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on duplicating, publishing or distributing the
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files on KeelyNet except where noted!
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March 14, 1992
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SOLAR2.ASC
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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This file shared with KeelyNet courtesy of Chuck Henderson.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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The following is the information that I received in responce to my
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telephone query of Phototherm requesting additional information on
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their new solar cell technology. ....Chuck.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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<< cover Letter >>
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ADVANCED RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT, INC.
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359R Main Street
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Athol,MA 01331
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TEL.: (508) 249-4696
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FAX: (508) 249-2134
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February 19,1992
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This information package is about an invention by Alvin M. Marks to
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convert sunlight to electric power. A few years of Research and
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Development are required to bring the thin film photovoltaic called
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Lumeloid (tm) into production.
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Alvin M. Marks was on President Kennedy's Power Panel and owns 120
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patents. He invented Polarized film materials, 3D movie technology
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and co-founded Marks Polarized Corporation. He received many U.S.
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Government contracts for alternative energy until the early 1980's.
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Studying the initial phase used in the process of photosynthesis
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Alvin Marks employed his knowledge of polarizing film materials to
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design aligned molecular antennae and molecular diodes to convert
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sunlight directly to electric power.
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Lumeloid's (tm) projected efficiency is 80%, (many times that of
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conventional silicon photovoltaics) with an investment cost only a
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fraction of existing electric power sources. Project Lumeloid's
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(tm) success will revolutionize the electric power industry with low
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cost efficient benign technology.
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Phototherm, Inc., a Public Company, OTC, holds license rights to
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Alvin Marks' light to electric power conversion patents. Advanced
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Research Development, Inc. is privately owned and has an exclusive
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R&D agreement with Phototherm, Inc.
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Page 1
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Project Lumeloid (tm) is partly funded by the Electric Power
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Research Institute with Lowell University preparing special
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materials for Marks' electrically-conducting polarized film. More
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funds are necessary to expedite Research and Development.
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Your support will help bring Lumeloid (tm) into Production and
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enable your participation in a technology beneficial to all.
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Sincerely,
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Jonathan Haber
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Program Director
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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The following articles and letter were included as part of the
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information packet.
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<< The following article is from the "Entrepreneurship Profile"
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section of "TAIPAN" (magazine?), November 1990 >>
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SOLAR BREAKTHROUGH - MASSACHUSETTS ENTREPRENEUR POINTS WAY TO
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PROFITS FROM ENVIRONMENTALLY BENIGN TECHNOLOGY
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In just two and a half hours enough radiant energy from the sun
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falls onto the earth to supply all the energy (from all sources)
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consumed by human civilization in an entire year.
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The light that falls on a few hundred square kilometers in the
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Southwestern desert of the United States is enough to power all of
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North America. The problem, however, has always been how to harness
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it.
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The rap against conventional photovoltaic cells (which convert light
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into electricity) has always been their cost. Conventional silicon-
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based solar cells convert sunlight to electricity at an average cost
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above US$0.30 per kilowatt hour (kwh). That is three to five times
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what an average U.S. household pays for power from the local utility
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company.
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It is precisely this cost disadvantage that has limited most solar
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applications to small-scale operations in remote areas far from
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commercial power mains.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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-> Massachusetts Miracle
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That is, until now. A 78-year old Massachusetts inventor, Dr. Alvin
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Marks, has come up with a new kind of solar cell that promises to
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produce electricity for less than US$0.02 per kwh.
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If this is true, development of this technology could potentially
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revolutionize the commercial power generation industry. After all,
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conventional power plants are like prisons. But nobody wants one
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built in their neighborhood.
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On the other hand, a solar plant produces no radiation, smoke, or
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acid rain. Moreover, its best location would be somewhere in a
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desert -- where nobody lives anyway.
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Marks' cost breakthrough was achieved by radical new design that
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dramatically increases the efficiency of solar conversion. While
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Page 2
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conventional cells are able to capture and convert only 10% to 25%
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of the sun's energy, Marks' new designs may capture as much as 80%.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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-> Dinner With Alvin
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The genesis of this breakthrough was a dinner conversation that took
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place seven years ago between Marks and the then Director of the
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Third World Energy Division of the United Nations, Dr. Usmani.
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After complaining about a photovoltaic test project in Africa that
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had to be abandoned because it was too expensive and inefficient,
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Usmani turned to Marks and said something to the effect of `You're
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an inventor, can't you invent a better photovoltaic cell.'
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Few people would be better equipped to accept such a challenge.
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Marks patented his first invention in January 1938. His early work
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lead to what the May 1935 issue of "SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN" termed a
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1,000 to 1 cost reduction in the fabrication of materials to
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polarize light.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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-> Polaroid Precursor
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This cost breakthrough was instrumental in the subsequent
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development of polarized sunglasses and Polaroid film. (In fact,
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Marks was an early rival of Dr. Edwin Land, developer of the Land
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Camera and founder of the Polaroid Corp.)
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In the early 1960s, Marks was science advisor to the Kennedy White
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House. Today, he holds a total of 120 patents -- a number of which
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have application to solar power generation.
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Marks new solar designs -- dubbed LEPCON (Light to Electric Power
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Converter) and LUMELOID -- are built on an extention of systems
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commonly used to receive microwave transmissions. (On the spectrum
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of electromagnetic energy, the difference between microwaves and
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visible light is merely that the latter have a higher frequency and
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a shorter wavelength.)
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Microwaves -- like other radio frequency transmissions -- are best
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received using an antenna tuned to the wavelength of the incoming
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signal. (When an electromagnetic wave strikes an electrically
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conductive material, it induces an alternating current of the same
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frequency of the incoming wave.)
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In real-world microwave applications, the efficiency of this
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connversion approaches 80%. LEPCON consists of millions of
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microscopic antennas (tuned to the wavelengths of the visible
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spectrum) embedded in a glass substrate. (LUMELOID use less
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expensive plastic materials.)
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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-> A Thousand Points Of Light
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With microwaves (as well as with radar and radio), however, the same
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tuned antenna will work as well for transmitting a signal as it does
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for receiving it. Operate LEPCON in reverse and it becomes a light
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source.
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Marks calls this reverse application ELCON (Electricity to Light
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Converter). ELCON elements in a group become a point of light, or a
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pixel.
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Page 3
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The same technology used to pack millions of submicron antenna
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elements in a glass or plastic substrate could be used to produce a
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new kind of high-definition TV (HDTV) screen with much higher
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resolution than present technology will allow.
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Conventional U.S. TV uses 525 scanning lines of pixels per screen.
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The most ambitious HDTV schemes yet proposed would use something on
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the order of 1,250 lines per screen. Using ELCON technology, screens
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using millions of lines may be possible -- for an 80,000% increase
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in resolution.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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-> Phototherm, Inc.
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Virtually all these ideas and devices have been patented by Marks.
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But lack of funds for the development of commercial prototypes has
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been a serious and continuing obstacle.
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To get LUMELOID off the ground, Marks formed a public company.
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Phototherm Inc. (OTC-pink sheets). However, it is still some
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distance away from a commercial product. Marks estimates an
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additional US$300,000 - US$500,000 will be necessary to get LUMELOID
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to the prototype stage.
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While North American interest in solar power has been sliding along
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with oil prices since the late 1970s, that has not been the case
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elsewhere. Last year, Marks made a deal with a Chinese company,
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China Petroleum Engineering Construction Corporation, to develop the
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LUMELOID prototype.
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Phototherm Bahamas Ltd. has been established to facilitate this
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endeavor and Chinese citizens will come to the Bahamas to learn the
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process.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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-> Genius And Fortune
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Because of the enormous breadth and depth of Marks' work, the
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"TAIPAN" research department believes no 20th century entrepreneur
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or inventor is destined to have greater positive effects on the
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daily lives of millions of people. However, revolutionary ideas are
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not any guarantee of quick commercial success.
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Because so much work remains before any of these ventures are likely
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to reach the stage of a profit-making enterprise, we suspect that
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attractive returns on Phototherm shares may be distant enough to try
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the patience of all but the most tenacious investors.
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However, if war in the Persian Gulf leads to destruction of the
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Saudi oil fields, we think promising technologies such as LEPCON and
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LUMELOID would suddenly become clear leaders on the fast track to
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commercial development.
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In the meantime, however, investors and entrepreneurs in search of
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more information should contact Dr. Alvin Marks, c/o Advanced
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Research Development, Inc.,359 R Main St., Athol, MA USA 01331;
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(508)249-4696; fax (508)249-2134.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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Page 4
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<< The following article is from the "Money Matters" section of
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"GREEN LIVING -- A Practical Journal For Friends Of The
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Environment" magazine, Winter 1991/92 >>
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INVESTING FOR A CLEANER EARTH AND BIG PAYOFF
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By Marshall Glickman
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Would you pay 25 cents for a share of a solar technology for which
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Exxon offered $9 million?
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That's the current price of Phototherm Inc., an Athol,
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Massachusetts, solar technology company which is developing a new
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ultra-efficient process of harnessing the sun's power.
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The founder and brains behind Phototherm is Dr. Alvin M. Marks, an
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octogenarian inventor and entrepreneur whose resume reads like an
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award ceremony. Dr. Marks is the holder of 120 patents, has degrees
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from Cooper Union Institute of Technology, Harvard University, and
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M.I.T., and has served as a scientific advisor to the Kennedy
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Adminstration. His work on polarizing film built Marks Polarized
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Corp. into a multimillion dollar business.
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Eight years ago Dr. Marks turned his full attention to improving the
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efficiency of solar (photovoltaic) electricity. His work lead to a
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patent (the one for which Exxon offered $9 million, according to a
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1986 "NEW YORK TIMES" report) that claims to convert sunlight to
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energy at 80% efficiency -- a cost of one to two cents per kilowatt
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hour. That's less than a fifth of the present cost of energy from
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fossil fuels and about one twentieth the cost of current
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photovoltaic systems (which are lucky to achieve 15 percent
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efficiency). The cost breakthrough is so incredible, that some
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skeptics immediately dismiss Dr. Marks.
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But Dr. Marks has made dramatic -- almost unbelievable --
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improvements in light technology before. The May 1935 issue of
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"SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN" noted Marks created a 1,000-to-1 cost
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reduction in the fabrication of materials to polarize light. His
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work with Phototherm has also impressed the Electric Power Research
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Institute, the electric industry's research thinktank. The EPRI
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recently backed Phototherm with $100,000 and has plans to add
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another $100,000 soon.
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Before you mortgage the house and whip out the checkbook, keep in
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mind that Phototherm is a highly risky investment. And I emphasize
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the word highly. Even though Dr. Marks is supremely confident his
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technologies will work, it has never been tested in commercial
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production. Dr. Marks is also eighty-one years old.
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Even if his patented design is indeed revolutionary technology,
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until Phototherm has enough money to hire a team of highly qualified
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research assistants, it may be difficult to carry on his work should
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he become ill (his health is excellent). Interest generated from a
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recent "BUSINESS WEEK" story on Phototherm may help get the company
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adequately financed, but until the cash comes through Dr. Marks must
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concentrate on raising money instead of science and building
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prototypes.
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Consider investing in Phototherm as you would give money to
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Page 5
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environmental groups -- with the kicker that if it does work out
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you'll get back a lot more than just clean air.
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Phototherm is listed on the OTC pink sheets. If you'd like more
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information about Phototherm, contact program director Jonathan
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Haber at 359R Main Street; Athol, MA 01331; (508)249-4696.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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<< The following article is from the "Energy" section of
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"THE BOSTON GLOBE", February 29,1988 >>
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ADVANCES BRING SOLAR POWER CLOSER
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Researchers Say Solar Will Take Off In Mid-90s, While Athol
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Scientist Claims A Breakthrough
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By David L. Chandler -- Globe Staff
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It's not that there's a shortage of energy. In just two and a half
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hours, enough sunlight falls on the Earth to supply all of mankind's
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energy needs -- heat, light, cooking, transportation, industry and
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every other energy-using activity -- for a full year.
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It's there, the hard part is catching it.
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Finding a practical and economical way to harness all that free,
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ubiquitous energy has challenged scientists and engineers since the
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energy crisis of the early 1970s awakened interest in alternative
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power sources.
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No major breakthroughs emerged during the 70s, but researchers say
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new methods developed in the last few years, and innovations just
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now emerging from the laboratories, will make solar power -- which
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is already competitive in some applications -- an increasingly
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important contributor to the world's energy supply.
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Most people in the solar energy field expect it will "really take
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off in about 1993 to 1995," said electrical engineer Richard Swanson
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of Stanford University, who has developed what are presently the
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world's most efficient solar cells.
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For a home or farm in remote areas not served by power lines, a
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solar-power system "right now is cost-effective against a diesel-
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power system," the present standard in small electric generators,
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according to Satyen Deb, manager of photovoltaic research for the
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federally-funded Solar Energy Research Institute in Colorado.
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And solar cells have always played an important role in the space
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program; they are the standard source of power for satellites and
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other long-term applications. As the US space station takes shape in
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orbit, their role will become ever more important -- especially
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since the only real alternative, small nuclear generators, may no
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longer be acceptable because of fears of what might happen to
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nuclear fuel in the event of a Challenger-type launch accident.
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But solar technology will really take off when it becomes
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competitive with other kinds of power plants that feed the nation's
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electrical transmission grid. "By the turn of the century, we should
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make a strong penetration in the grid market," Deb predicted last
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week.
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Page 6
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Ways of harnessing the sun span the gamut of technology, from the
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simple to the futuristic, and all have a part to play.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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*** At the simple end, there are already several million solar
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stoves, consisting of dish-shaped aluminum reflectors, being
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used in India. They have made a dent in the problem of
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deforestation -- obtaining fuel for cooking is one of the
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principal reasons for cutting trees in developing countries.
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*** At the futuristic end, an inventor in Athol has patented a
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completely new kind of solar-electric cell that he says could be
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far more efficient and far cheaper than the silicon panels now
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in use, making solar power practial for everything from
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individual homes and farms to huge solar installations for
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utilities.
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*** And in between, improvements in silicon solar cells promise to
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bring down costs enough to make this technology competitive with
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other power sources. Prominent among them is the development of
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"amorphous silicon," a glass-like material that can be coated
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onto a thin plastic sheet to replace the expensive pure silicon
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crystals of traditional solar cells.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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Potentially the most exciting development is the solar cell invented
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by Athol-based Alvin M. Marks, a 77-year-old inventor with more than
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100 patents to his name. If his calculations are right, Marks'
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system could provide all of the nation's electrical needs at a
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fraction of today's cost with the equivalent of a single 100-mile-
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square of solar panels located in a sunny desert area -- eliminating
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the need for coal, oil, or nuclear plants with their attendant
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hazards.
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Marks, who was an energy consultant to President Kennedy, was
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inspired to develop his solar power system during a conversation
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about the great need for solar power in developing nations, where
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sunlight tends to be abundant and power plants scarce.
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"About five years ago," Marks said in an interview, "we were sitting
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with an official from the United Nations talking about photovoltaics
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in the Third World. He said,`isn't there something you can do to
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make them more efficient?'"
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Marks agreed to think about it, and before long he had concluded
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there was a way. His first solar patent, for a glass-plate collector
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he calls Lepcon (light to electric power converter), was issued in
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1984. It was followed in 1986 by a patent for a lower-cost, plastic-
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sheet version called Lumeloid. His latest patent on an improved
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version of the technology was granted last month.
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Although some scientists question his figures, Marks says his
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technology could theoretically have an efficiency of 80 percent --
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that is, 80 percent of the sun's power reaching the cell would be
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converted to usable electricity. By comparison, the most advanced
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design silicon cell in Swanson's laboratory at Stanford has produced
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about 28 percent efficiency and available commercial versions
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average about 10 to 12 percent.
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The basic technology of Marks' cells is a modification of systems
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used to pick up microwave transmissions, which do achieve
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efficiencies of 80 percent in real world applications, not just in
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Page 7
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the lab. Critics, however, point out that microwaves used for
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communications are all of the same wavelength, while sunlight is a
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mixture of many wavelengths, or colors, of light.
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Marks says he has taken this into account, because his cells would
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consist of millions of tiny "antennas" of different lengths, each
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tuned to a different wavelength of light so that among them, they
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would pick up light of all colors.
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Some critics also question Marks' optimism about how quickly the
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technology could be made practical for manufacturing in commercial
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quantities. Marks thinks one version could be in production within
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two years, while others think it may be quite a few years off.
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No one, however, disputes the principle involved, which is based on
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well-established concepts.
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Conventional solar cells generate electricity with an array of tiny
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transistor-like areas of semiconductor material on a silicon chip,
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which absorb energy from light to break electrons loose and send
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them toward one terminal of the cell, producing an electric current.
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Marks' cells will use an array of even tinier metal strips, which
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serve as antennas to pick up energy from light in much the same way
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that a radio antenna picks up energy from radio waves.
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The current produced in each antenna is intially AC, or alternating
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current, unlike the DC (direct current) of conventional cells, but
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tiny diodes -- one-way electrical "valves" -- in the gaps between
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antennas would convert the current to DC.
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Lumeloid, the cheaper but less-durable version of his system, is an
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offshoot of a polarizing filter that was Marks' first invention.
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His was the first man-made material commercially produced to
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polarize, predating Edwin Land's polarizing filters. One version
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developed later by Marks is still in production for polarizing
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sunglasses and 3-D movie glasses.
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Light can be thought of as waves or vibrations, and in ordinary
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light these vibrations move every which way. In polarized light, the
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vibrations all move in the same direction -- vertically or
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horizontally.
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The production of the polarizing filters, and of Lumeloid, seems to
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have more in common with candy making than with the high-tech,
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clean-room process used to make silicon cells.
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"You make a syrup," Marks explains, of chemicals called polymers
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that form long-chain molecules, suspended in an electrically
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conductive material. "You stretch it like taffy, and all the
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molecules become parallel." In a simple large-scale way, this
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process yields millions of the microscopic chain-like molecules all
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lined up in a neat grid that can filter out all the light rays that
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vibrate in one direction, allowing those that vibrate in the other
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to pass through -- producing polarized light. By simply adding a
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different kind of chemical to the recipe -- a "donor- receptor"
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molecule -- the polarizing filter becomes a solar generator, Marks
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says.
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Page 8
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Marks expects the lightweight plastic Lumeloid, manufactured by the
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"taffy-pulling" method to be the first of his solar materials to
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reach the production stage. If he can raise the financial backing he
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needs He is negotiating with state and federal agencies as well as
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private investors), he thinks a prototype could be made in about
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nine months.
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"The reason I'm so sure about Lumeloid," Marks said last week, "is
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because I've been involved in polarizing material for decades, and
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the materials are not that different."
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Others are not so sure. Elliot Berman, chief scientist for Arco
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Solar company, a maker of silicon cells, said in an interview that
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"it's a good idea, I just don't think he can build it."
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"It's not that it's impossible," Berman added, "it's just not
|
|
practical at the present time. It's pretty far away." Berman
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|
conceded, however, that he is not familiar with the details of
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Marks' manufacturing plans.
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Edgar Demeo, head of solar power research for the Electric Power
|
|
Research Institute, takes a middle position, saying the Marks system
|
|
is "an elegant approach to converting solar energy" and "is a very
|
|
nice idea and is worthy of some basic research at this point." But,
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|
he added, it may take "a number of years" to become a commercial
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|
product.
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In the meantime, Berman sees other developments that could reach the
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|
market sooner and make substantial inroads in a variety of
|
|
applications. "I think there are some substantial progress," he
|
|
said.
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|
Solar cells have dropped in price from about $20 per watt of output
|
|
15 years ago to about $5 per watt today, and Berman sees the new
|
|
amorphous silicon cells -- especially a version he calls "tandem
|
|
cells," where amorphous (glasslike instead of crystalline) cells
|
|
sensitive to one color of light are paired with cells sensitive to
|
|
another color in order to improve efficiency -- cutting that price
|
|
in half within the next two and a half years. That would bring it
|
|
close to the range of other power sources, which generally cost
|
|
between $1 and $2 per watt.
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When that happens, Berman said, solar power will have reached the
|
|
price level "where we think this will be practical for widespread
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use.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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>>> NOTE: I am including the following letter to provide another
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possible source of information on his research.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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<< The following letter is from Zhejiang University in Hangzhou,
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China. Cable: 0420 HANGZHOU, Telex: 35040 ZUFAO ON,
|
|
Fax: 0571 - 571797. 723582 >>
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Page 9
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Dept. of Chemistry
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Zhejiang University
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Hangzhou, 310027
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Dec. 20, 1991
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President Alvin M. Marks
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Advanced Research Development Inc.
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359R Main Street, Athol, MA01331
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U.S.A.
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|
|
Dear President Marks:
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|
|
Thank you for your letter of oct. 29. I'm very glad to inform
|
|
you that the proposal of cooperation between our university and your
|
|
Inc. on the research of polymeric light /electric power conversion
|
|
has been approved by our university. Now, we are waiting the reply
|
|
from the Chinese Petrolium Engineering Construction Corporation
|
|
(CPECC) for the financial support to this project.
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|
|
In our institute, about ten staff members including five
|
|
professors, five doctors and graduated students will be involved in
|
|
this research work.
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|
|
We look forward to a fruitful and mutually stimulating program
|
|
of cooperation between us.
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|
|
Merry Christmas and wish you a happy new year.
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|
|
Sincerely,
|
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|
|
Xu You-yi
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|
cc: The members involved in the program in our Institute.
|
|
Prof.: Shi-ling Yang
|
|
Associate Prof.: You-yi Xu; Mang Wang; Mu-jie Yang;
|
|
Qing-mei Hu
|
|
Dr.: Zhi-kang Xu; Hong-zhen Chen
|
|
Graduated students: Zhi-ping Lu; Pu-deng Pan; Jiu-li Shen
|
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|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
The information in this file is in response and addition to the
|
|
material that is contained in file SOLAR1.ASC (or .ZIP). If you want
|
|
more information, I will be posting another file (SOLAR3.) shortly.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
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|
|
If you have comments or other information relating to such topics
|
|
as this paper covers, please upload to KeelyNet or send to the
|
|
Vangard Sciences address as listed on the first page.
|
|
Thank you for your consideration, interest and support.
|
|
|
|
Jerry W. Decker.........Ron Barker...........Chuck Henderson
|
|
Vangard Sciences/KeelyNet
|
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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If we can be of service, you may contact
|
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Jerry at (214) 324-8741 or Ron at (214) 242-9346
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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