Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2013
Volume 58, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 18–22, 2013; Baltimore, Maryland
Session G29: FIAP Prize Session |
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Sponsoring Units: FIAP Chair: Mark Bernius, Dow Chemical Company Room: 337 |
Tuesday, March 19, 2013 11:15AM - 11:51AM |
G29.00001: George E. Pake Prize Lecture: Crystalline Silicon Photovoltaics: Accelerating to Grid Parity Invited Speaker: Mark Pinto Lost in recent headlines about solar company failures, reduced government support and depressed stock valuations is the fact that photovoltaic (PV) systems continue to be installed at an extremely healthy rate -- a ten-fold increase between 2007 and 2012, to a cumulative 100GWp of installations worldwide. The primary factor behind this remarkable growth has been cost reduction at the installed system level afforded by manufacturing and technology improvements to the crystalline silicon (c-Si) PV cell. In fact in the past 2 years, c-Si module cost learning curves have accelerated over their historical norms as a function of both volume and time, and as a result c-Si PV has reached parity with conventional forms of electricity in 20$+$ countries worldwide. In this presentation future c-Si technology paths will be reviewed along with market implications, leading to the projection that between 2015 and 2020, c-Si based PV electricity will be cost-effectively delivered to \textgreater 95{\%} of the world's population. [Preview Abstract] |
Tuesday, March 19, 2013 11:51AM - 12:27PM |
G29.00002: Prize for Industrial Applications of Physics Lecture: A physicist in Business Invited Speaker: John Woollam In the 1980s I inherited a famous ellipsometry laboratory. To speed up data acquisition and analysis I associated myself with creative scientists and engineers. We started a company which grew. Together we rapidly improved acquisition speed, accuracy, precision, spectral range, and types of applications. Yet, a business is much more than technology. In this talk I outline how a high-tech business functions, and illustrate the role of physicists and engineers in making a company successful. It is fast-paced, exciting, and enormously gratifying to provide quality instruments for researchers and industry. [Preview Abstract] |
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