PPG Expert Sees Era Of Growth, Innovation In Solar Glazings
Wayne Boor, manager, solar technology transfer, PPG Industries' (NYSE:PPG) performance glazings business, said industry forecasters expect solar glazings to account for 10 to 20 percent of flat glass sales, if not more, by 2015.
As part of a presentation at the Glass Association of North
America’s (GANA’s) Solar Symposium in July, Boor said he expects the
rise of solar glazings to resemble an earlier era of glass industry
innovation, the growth of automotive glass. He explained that prior to
1900, nearly all flat glass manufactured in the United States was for
architectural applications. By 1940, automotive glass accounted for
about 25 percent of all flat glass sales. Boor said he sees a similar
arc for solar glazings, which now account for about 2 percent of flat
glass sales.
He also identified other historic parallels. For instance, Boor
said the first architectural glasses were clear, but the industry
eventually discovered that tinted coatings could help keep building
interiors cool. Similarly, clear glass was the precursor to advanced
solar glazings, which eventually incorporated coatings to promote higher
levels of light transmittance, durability and conductivity, along with
ultra-low iron formulations to improve solar transmittance.
To increase the efficiency of solar glass, Boor said PPG is working
closely with industry leaders to advance several technologies. The
first is to make glass substrates more transparent to solar energy. This
is being done by combining special low-iron batch materials with
proprietary process techniques to lower iron “redox,” which selectively
improves infrared transmittance.
PPG also is developing thin-film coatings that prevent sodium
migration under high temperatures, introduce surface conductivity or
make solar glazings either anti-reflective or highly reflective,
depending on the desired property. Individually or in combination, these
attributes can significantly enhance solar technology performance.
Finally, for concentrated solar power (CSP) applications, Boor said
he sees a movement toward self-cleaning solar glass that maintains
mirror reflectivity and performance.
Source: GlassOnWeb

