Depends on the type of laser you are using and the amount of energy it exerts in terms of wavelength as sunlight may have more energy and a different wavelength than the laser. I’ve enclosed a link from NASA – laser beamed power…
There’s a limit to how much power a given spot on the solar cell can produce. With the laser light all concentrated on one spot, the cell saturates and you don’t get as much power as you would if the light was spread out over the whole face.
The laser light is the wrong color. You probably are using a red laser because they are most common. But red photons don’t have enough energy to operate a solar cell. If you can find an argon laser (green light), it would probably work: the photons are more energetic.
you’re probably using a red laser…and it’s probably a rather low power red laser at that…a few mW. If you tried a shorter wavelength, higher power laser you would be able to power the calculator.
because they reflect it?
Report this comment
Depends on the type of laser you are using and the amount of energy it exerts in terms of wavelength as sunlight may have more energy and a different wavelength than the laser. I’ve enclosed a link from NASA – laser beamed power…
http://powerweb.grc.nasa.gov/pvsee/publications/lasers/IAF92_0600.html
Report this comment
There’s a limit to how much power a given spot on the solar cell can produce. With the laser light all concentrated on one spot, the cell saturates and you don’t get as much power as you would if the light was spread out over the whole face.
http://powerweb.grc.nasa.gov/pvsee/publications/lasers/IAF92_0600.html
Report this comment
The laser light is the wrong color. You probably are using a red laser because they are most common. But red photons don’t have enough energy to operate a solar cell. If you can find an argon laser (green light), it would probably work: the photons are more energetic.
http://powerweb.grc.nasa.gov/pvsee/publications/lasers/IAF92_0600.html
Report this comment
you’re probably using a red laser…and it’s probably a rather low power red laser at that…a few mW. If you tried a shorter wavelength, higher power laser you would be able to power the calculator.
http://powerweb.grc.nasa.gov/pvsee/publications/lasers/IAF92_0600.html
Report this comment