IBM, Harvard Use Distributed Computing to Make Ultra-Powerful Solar Cells
Researchers at IBM and Harvard are using the power of community to create cheap, efficient solar cells. The Clean Energy Project will use small amounts of computing power from volunteers— like in the SETI project— to run calculations on compounds in the hopes of finding a combination of organic materials that can be used to make cheap, flexible plastic solar cells.
Technology resulting from the experiment could be used to make solar windows, line blankets, and backpacks.
The solar power project will use IBM’s World Community Grid— a large network of volunteer computers with calculating capabilities that rank it as one of the top ten supercomputers in the world. IBM’s number-crunching Grid software runs in the background of volunteer computers as a screensaver. The program will process over 1 million configurations of atoms in the next two years.
According to IBM and Harvard scientists, the cloud-computing experiment will cut the time necessary to run the solar power calculations by 20 years. With potentially game-changing results, perhaps it will inspire other scientific endeavors to harness people-power.
Photo Credit: NREL





December 9th, 2008 at 7:05 am
Would be nice to have a link on how to join the project. After installing Boinc, I could not find the solar project in the list of projects.
September 25th, 2009 at 10:10 am
Just see how much solar sheats where sell for?
Thank you,
Justin Smith