solar panels – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com israelhayom english website Wed, 05 Jan 2022 15:08:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.israelhayom.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/cropped-G_rTskDu_400x400-32x32.jpg solar panels – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com 32 32 Cracked smartphone screens might soon repair themselves thanks to Israeli discovery https://www.israelhayom.com/2022/01/05/cracked-smartphone-screens-might-soon-repair-themselves-thanks-to-israeli-discovery/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2022/01/05/cracked-smartphone-screens-might-soon-repair-themselves-thanks-to-israeli-discovery/#respond Wed, 05 Jan 2022 13:30:58 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=745495   Like most items with which we live and use on a daily basis, electronics are subject to wear and tear, which reduces their performance until they need to be replaced. Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram However, the field of self-repairing material is growing rapidly, and scientists at the Technion-Israel Institute of […]

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Like most items with which we live and use on a daily basis, electronics are subject to wear and tear, which reduces their performance until they need to be replaced.

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However, the field of self-repairing material is growing rapidly, and scientists at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology have developed eco-friendly nanocrystal semiconducters that can "heal" themselves – potentially saving users from shelling out for another new smartphone.

The journal Advanced Functional Materials recently published the researchers' findings, which show a group of materials called double perovskites displaying self-healing properties after being damaged by radiation from an electron beam. Perovskites, first discovered in the 19th century, caught scientists' attention because of their electro-optical characteristics that make them highly efficient in converting energy.

Professor Yehonadav Bekenstein from the Technion's Faculty of Materials Sciences and Engineering and the Solid-State Institute is leading a team that specializes in the synthesis of nano-scale crystals from new materials. By controlling the crystals' composition, shape, and size, they change the material's physical properties. The team is seeking out environmentally friendly alternatives to toxic lead, and engineering perovskites that are free of lead.

Bekenstein's lab produced perovskite nanoparticles through a short, simple process that involved heating the material to 100°C for a few minutes. When Ph.D. students Sasha Khalfin and Noam Veber examined the particles using a transmission electron microscope, they discovered that the microscope's high-voltage electron beam created holes in the nanocrystals. The researchers were then able to explore how those holes interacted with the surrounding material.

The researchers developed a code that analyzed dozens of videos made using the electron microscope and discovered that found that holes formed on the surface of the nanoparticles, then moved to energetically stable areas inside. They hypothesized that holes moved inward due to organic molecules that coated the nanocrystals' surface. Once these organic molecules were removed, the group discovered the crystal spontaneously ejected the holes to the surface and out, essentially repairing itself.

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Negev Desert hosting Israel's largest solar project to date https://www.israelhayom.com/2019/09/06/israels-largest-ever-solar-project-launched-in-negev/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2019/09/06/israels-largest-ever-solar-project-launched-in-negev/#respond Fri, 06 Sep 2019 09:17:19 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=413985 A private Israeli company on Tuesday inaugurated the largest solar project in the country, the Israeli financial daily Globes reported. Located in the Negev in southern Israel, the Ashalim solar-energy project is the size of a small town and is currently producing enough energy to power an estimated 70,000 households, according to the report. Follow […]

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A private Israeli company on Tuesday inaugurated the largest solar project in the country, the Israeli financial daily Globes reported.

Located in the Negev in southern Israel, the Ashalim solar-energy project is the size of a small town and is currently producing enough energy to power an estimated 70,000 households, according to the report.

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Shikun & Binui Holdings Ltd. chief shareholder Naty Saidoff announced the start of Ashalim's commercial operations at a ceremony attended by Israeli Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz.

"Since I assumed office, I have used every possible means to increase the scope of renewable energy production, and by doing so, I expect to meet the government goal of 10% by the end of 2020," Steinitz said.

"The breakthrough in this field enables us, in addition to stopping the use of coal, to significantly promote the 2030 renewability goal," he added.

Saidoff said, "I am proud to be given the opportunity to build meaningful mega-projects in Israel and abroad, and plan to promote similar projects in the future."

The 988-acre plant comprises approximately 16,000 parabolic troughs and about half-a-million concave mirrors and converts solar energy into steam that is then used to generate electricity. The Negev Energy Power Station has a unique system for storing thermal energy, based on molten salt, allowing the plant to operate for an extra 4.5 hours a day at full power following sunset.

Negev Energy is a joint venture of Shikun & Binui Energy (50%), the Noy Infrastructure Fund (40%) and the Spanish firm TSK (10%). It won a government tender in 2013 for the planning, design, financing, construction, operation, and maintenance of a 121 MW thermal-solar plant for a 25-year period.

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