A cost effective and highly-durable wavelength-selective photovoltaic (PV) panel is being developed that simultaneously facilitates plant growth, reduces cooling requirements and generates power at less than $1/watt incremental cost. The greenhouse uses a luminescent sheet laminated to the glass panels with narrow Si photovoltaic strips to selectively absorb the green portion of the solar spectrum that is not used by plants. Green light is then selectively downshifted to red light to match to the photosynthetically active region for plants and the efficiency maximum of Silicon-based photovoltaic cells. The color tuning associated with the conversion of green to red light has been shown to facilitate fruit production in tomatoes and increase flower production. A prototype greenhouse will be built with suitable control to test the technology under 6-months of California aging conditions and which can respond to customer needs. This proposal will create a greenhouse that can be remotely monitored via the web to provide results on both plant growth and the energy production.

Creating energy-neutral greenhouses that can pay for themselves in a few years of operation will open up the ability to grow healthy food in locations where it is currently not economically viable due to the local climate of available resources. This product will target the rapidly growing-local food industry that saves natural resources by growing food close to where it is consumed. Natural resources are saved by avoiding food transportation costs, by using the same land to provide both food and electrical energy, and by more efficiently utilizing water resources. The commercialization of this power-generating greenhouse will open up a new avenue for PV deployment and potentially create U.S. based manufacturing jobs by utilizing our existing window production lines and knowledge.

Project Report

NSF I-Corps — Project Outcomes The outcomes of the NSF I-Corps grant are most notably the incorporation of Soliculture, continued funding, current projects in progress as well as in the pipeline, and interested customers ready to purchase the product if the current and upcoming trials are successful in terms of plant response, electricity-generation, and panel reliability. The NSF I-Corps success is summarized below as applied to the areas of interest set forth in the grant proposal. Brief description of commercial impact a. Typical customer of the proposed innovation The customer was identified as being the greenhouse grower rather than a greenhouse manufacturer or supplier. The size of grower we are most interested to engage with is large with 10-100 acres of technologically advanced glass greenhouses. Engaging directly with the greenhouse owner is the most efficient way to make a sale. b. Customer need that will be met by the technology Greenhouse growers will be able to realize much higher profit margins per unit area of greenhouse through significant reduction in energy costs and increased crop yields. We estimate a return on investment of less than 5-years, which was confirmed as reasonable. Greenhouse customers would be able to profit from selling renewable electrical power back to the grid after this 5 year period. c. How customers currently meets those needs Customers currently meet their electrical needs through purchasing power from the electric company, or through installing traditionally mounted PV panels which have an ROI of much longer than 5 years and also take additional land resources to install. d. Our approach Our PV technology allows growers to mount PV cells directly over their crops with power production enhanced by a low cost luminescent absorber that additionally tunes the light spectrum to be more favorable for plant growth. This technology is integrated directly into the greenhouse structure, eliminating additional structural costs, with the ability to generate all the electricity that a grower consumes while enhancing crop production while reducing habitat destruction that result from large land installations of photovoltaics. e. How much will a customer would pay for our solution The customer will pay for the installation of our panels enduring an ROI of 5-6 years. Depending on the location of the installation (i.e. electricity prices, incentives, and quantity of sunlight), this comes out to ~$100/m2. Project Outcome and proof of technology By the end of I-Corps, Soliculture finished an electricity-generating greenhouse prototype with live electricity-generation monitoring capability and plant trials in session. The response from growers was that they’d be willing to invest in our technology by buying a system sized to reduce their electricity costs to zero with a payback time of 5-6 years. The most important factor for the growers was generating electricity without harming their plants, thus hinging on convincing plant trial results. Various growers identified other specific potential product benefits being greenhouse heating reduction, wavelength specific shading enhancement of crop productivity, earlier fruiting/flowering, and sustainability branding. The main benefit though remained increased profits due to producing electricity at zero cost after initial investment recovery. In addition to the important information supplied by growers that aided in product development, the network of grower contacts and experts within the greenhouse industry has been an invaluable asset that has resulted from the I-Corps experience. One specific result from these connections was our first commercial trial of our product being a 6,000 ft2 installation of our red panels into the greenhouse for one year with continuous monitoring of crop yield and power generation. This grower was interviewed during the I-Corps experience and has been a valuable partner and is now a potential customer of Soliculture. This trial is still in progress until April, and so far has been successful in terms of crop yield and led to an unexpected benefit of our panels creating a disease resistance crop. This was a huge surprise to witness an entire greenhouse crop get wiped out by disease with the exception of the plants underneath our red panels. The input from the teaching team at I-Corps provided support that led to successful engagement with growers. That guidance also led to the highest productivity of those conversations to be achieved since they were designed as a tool to prove or disprove each hypothesis of our business model. Overall, we were able to identify a specific market that is reachable by our initial product as perfected by grower input and engage with commercial grower trials and continued funding sources that will lead to our first customer in 2015, and the projected take-off of our business from there.

Agency
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Institute
Division of Industrial Innovation and Partnerships (IIP)
Type
Standard Grant (Standard)
Application #
1216359
Program Officer
Rathindra DasGupta
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2012-03-01
Budget End
2013-08-31
Support Year
Fiscal Year
2012
Total Cost
$50,000
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California Santa Cruz
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Santa Cruz
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
95064