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VAN MELLE USA's MANUFACTURING FACILITY INSTALLS SIEMENS SOLAR SYSTEM IN HUGE ROOFTOP ARRAY

50 Kilowatt System Using 714 Solar Modules Exemplifies Dedication to Innovative Environmental Policy

ERLANGER, Kentucky, December 6, 1999 – Van Melle, a global producer of confectionery products, has just installed a large solar array that will feed into the electrical system that serves its US manufacturing facility in Erlanger, Ky.  The solar system comprising 714 modules from Siemens Solar Industries is part of a global corporate commitment: a basic tenet of the company's mission is to be ``dedicated to reduce the impact on the environment to a sustainable level."

 ``This is actually our third rooftop system from Siemens Solar.  We've already installed similar systems in Holland and China," explained David Reed, Environmental and Safety Coordinator, Van Melle USA.  ``Van Melle has a keen awareness of the environment.  We are very proud of our accomplishments and our commitment toward the future of our environment." 

 Siemens Solar worked with Van Melle to install the rooftop array.  The project was completed November 20th and is generating 44 kW at peak hours, which is then going into the system serving the manufacturing facility and office.

 The 120,000 square-foot facility is the third Van Melle manufacturing facility to be powered by solar; others are in Holland and China.  The office expansion, built two years prior, already has skylights and light monitors to increase natural lighting as well as a solar thermal system that provides hot water to the office building.  Future plans include a wind turbine to be completed in 2000 as an addition to the present renewable energy source.

About Siemens Solar

 Siemens Solar comprises Siemens Solar GmbH in Munich, a joint venture of Siemens AG and Bayernwerk AG, Siemens Solar Industries L.P. in Camarillo (Calif.) and two Joint Ventures: Siemens Showa Solar Ltd., Singapore, and Showa Solar Energy KK, Tokyo. Siemens Solar has to date supplied over 150 MW throughout the world, making it the leading company in the photovoltaics industry. For sales information, contact Ssi.sales@solar.siemens.com.

About Van Melle

 Van Melle produces and markets confectionery products, including the brands Mentos, Fruit-tella, Meller and Airheads. Apart from production units in the Netherlands, Van Melle has production facilities and sales organizations in the United States, Brazil, Indonesia, China and Poland. Van Melle also has sales companies in a number of Western and Eastern European countries, in Asia, India and Russia. Van Melle's products are sold in over 100 countries.

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Editors notes:

  • Slides and digital photos are available from the press contacts.
  • Mentos, Fruit-tella, Meller and Airheads are all registered trademarks of Van Melle.
     

Contact:
Tina Nickerson at (805)388-6519
FAX: (805)388-6395

 

 Siemens Solar panels

Solar panel
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A photovoltaic (PV) module that is composed of multiple PV cells. Two or more interconnected PV modules create an array.conservs the energy of THE LIGHT . Electrons from these excited atoms form an electric current, which can be used by external devices. Solar panels were in use over one hundred years ago for water heating in homes. Solar panels can also be made with a specially shaped mirror that concentrates light onto a tube of oil. The oil then heats up, and travels through a vat of water, instantly boiling it. The steam created turns a turbine for power.[1]

Contents [hide]
1 History 
2 How Solar Panels Work 
3 See also 
4 References 



solar panels History
The history of solar panels dates back to 1839, when French physicist Antoine César Becquerel discovered the photovoltaic effect during an experiment involving an electrolytic cell that was made up of two metal electrodes placed in an electrolyte solution. Becquerel discovered that when his device was exposed to light the amount of electricity generated increased.[2]

Then in 1883, the first genuine solar cell was built by Charles Fritts. Fritts' solar cell was formed by coating sheets of selenium with a thin layer of gold.[3]

Between 1883 and 1941 many scientists, inventors and companies experimented with solar energy. During these years Clarence Kemp, a Baltimore inventor patented the first commercial water heater powered from solar energy. In addition, Albert Einstein published his thesis on the photoelectric effect and a few years later received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his research. William Bailey, an employee of the Carnegie Steel Company, invented the first solar collector with copper coils contained in an insulated box.[2]

In 1941, Russell Ohl, an American inventor who worked for Bell Laboratories, patented the first silicon solar cell. Ohl’s new invention led Bell Laboratories to produce the first crystalline silicon solar panel in 1954. This solar cell achieved a 4% return on energy conversion. In the years that followed, other scientists continued to improve on this original solar cell and began to produce solar cells with 6% efficiency.[4]

The first large scale use for solar electrical energy was space satellites. With government backing much of the research the US was able to produce a solar cell with twenty percent efficiency by 1980 and by early 2000 had produced solar cells with 24% efficiency. As of November 2007 two companies, Spectrolab and Emcore Photovoltaics dominate world solar cell production and have the ability to produce cells with 28% efficiency.[4]


solar panels How Solar Panels Work
The basic element of solar panels is pure silicon. When stripped of impurities, silicon makes an ideal neutral platform for transmission of electrons. In silicon’s natural state, it carries four electrons, but has room for eight. Therefore silicon has room for four more electrons. If a silicon atom comes in contact with another silicon atom, each receives the other atom's four electrons. Eight electrons satisfy the atoms' needs, this creates a strong bond, but there is no positive or negative charge. This material is used on the plates of solar panels. Combining silicon with other elements that have a positive or negative charge can also create solar panels.[5]

For example, phosphorus has five electrons to offer to other atoms. If silicon and phosphorus are combined chemically, the results are a stable eight electrons with an additional free electron. The silicon does not need the free electron, but it can not leave because it is bonded to the other phosphorous atom. Therefore, this silicon and phosphorus plate is considered to be negatively charged.[5]

A positive charge must also be created in order for electricity to flow. Combining silicon with an element such as boron, which only has three electrons to offer, creates a positive charge. A silicon and boron plate still has one spot available for another electron. Therefore, the plate has a positive charge. The two plates are sandwiched together to make solar panels, with conductive wires running between them.[5]

Photons bombard the silicon/phosphorus atoms when the negative plates of solar cells are pointed at the sun. Eventually, the 9th electron is knocked off the outer ring. Since the positive silicon/boron plate draws it into the open spot on its own outer band, this electron doesn't remain free for long. As the sun's photons break off more electrons, electricity is then generated. When all of the conductive wires draw the free electrons away from the plates, there is enough electricity to power low amperage motors or other electronics, although the electricity generated by one solar cell is not very impressive by itself. When electrons are not used or lost to the air they are returned to the negative plate and the entire process begins again.[5]


solar panels See also
Battery (electricity) 
Energy economics 
Photovoltaic array 
Photovoltaics in transport 
Renewable energy 
Solar power satellite 
Solar lamp 

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