Researchers make game-changing breakthrough that could change how we heat our homes: 'Has great potential'
A researcher at Umeå University in Sweden recently developed new sustainable coatings for these collectors that can improve their efficiency and durability, according to a report from the school.
"Solar thermal has great potential to contribute to the green transition, especially as a source of industrial process heat. But the technology needs to become even more competitive to gain broader traction," said Erik Zäll, a doctoral student in experimental physics at Umeå University.
By leveraging more sustainable methods of heat or electricity generation, companies can reduce their carbon footprints, decrease their operating costs, and even pass on those savings to consumers.
Zäll explained in his doctoral thesis how optical coatings could be tailored for two key components of solar thermal collectors: the cover glass, where light enters the system, and the receiver that absorbs the light and converts it into heat.
An anti-reflective silica coating with small, hexagonally ordered pores helped improve light transmission through the cover glass while boosting the coating's resistance to environmental factors such as scratches, dirt, and moisture.
For the receiver, two solutions were presented that helped absorb most of the sunlight while emitting little thermal radiation. Both can be manufactured using low-cost, environmentally friendly methods that can be scaled up for production.
One option uses an electroplated cobalt-chromium coating that absorbs light and is more environmentally friendly than other types of chromium previously used.
The second is a composite film made up of carbon nanotubes and silica, which the report said can be spray-coated onto annealed stainless steel using ultrasonic technology. The thermal treatment of the steel helps create a thin oxide layer that boosts optical properties and heat resistance.
According to the World Economic Forum, heat accounts for half the world's energy consumption, from home space heaters to industrial applications. The processes used in creating this heat contribute more than 40% of global energy-related carbon dioxide emissions.
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Solar energy systems can use the sun's rays to heat water or air in buildings, with flat-plate collectors being the most common type for applications where temperatures of 200 degrees Fahrenheit are sufficient.
Some industrial-scale solar thermal power plants use vast arrays of concentrating collectors that focus the sun's rays on a smaller absorber for heat generation.
Zäll's research was done in collaboration with Absolicon Solar Collector and is specifically adapted to the Swedish solar energy company's designs, which have led to two patent applications for more efficient solar collectors.
Absolicon's website details how its sustainable heat collector systems can work alongside solar photovoltaics to lighten the load on the electricity grid and boiler systems that use dirty fuels.
Those systems include thermal energy storage in the form of heat batteries, which allow them to operate around the clock, even when the sun isn't shining, increasing the sustainability factor for the technology.
"Our work shows that it's possible to combine sustainability, cost-effectiveness and high performance in optical coatings – a key to making solar heat a viable alternative to fossil fuels on a larger scale," Zäll concluded.
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8 hours ago
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People have been struck by lightning from storms centered as far as 10 miles away. This story originally published on October 9, 2009. It was updated on July 21, 2025.

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Bees have some ways to cope with a warming Earth, but researchers fear for their future
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Back at Barnes' hives in Ohio, thousands of honeybees fly around as he gathers boxes to take back to his farm for honey production. Nearby, a couple of his bees land on milkweed flowers, a rare bit of plant diversity in an area dominated by corn and soybean fields. For Barnes, who operates Honeyrun Farm with his wife, Jayne, one of the challenges heat can pose to his 500 honeybee hives is fending off parasitic mites that threaten the bees. If temperatures get too hot, he can't apply formic acid, an organic chemical that kills the mites. If it's applied when it's too hot, the bees could die. Last year they lost almost a third of the 400 hives they sent to California to help pollinate commercial almond groves. Barnes thinks those hives may have been in poor health ahead of pollination because they were unable to ward off mites when it was hot months earlier. 'Dead hives aren't pollinating the almonds,' he said. 'It's a real ripple effect that stems back from the heat in the summertime.' Sometimes the heat helps. Here in Ohio, Barnes' hives last summer produced a bumper crop of honey as they feasted on nearby soybean nectar as the plants bloomed in the heat. Still, the lack of diverse plants for bees to forage in an area dominated by corn and soybean fields isn't ideal. And even the native blooms are appearing erratically, Barnes said. In autumn, his bees search for food on goldenrod, but those blooms are appearing later. And even then, he has supplemented his hive with additional food to keep them healthy into the winter. 'Every single plant that blooms is something that the bee can use,' Barnes said. 'And every single plant is affected by climate change.' It's only in the last decade that people have become aware of the magnitude of the pollinator decline globally, said Harrison, of Arizona State University. Data is limited on how much climate change and heat stress is contributing to pollinator decline. 'It's a relatively new focus for biology," he said. 'I think it's super important, but it's not being studied a ton.' The Trump administration's proposed budget would eliminate the research program that funds the USGS Bee Lab, which supports the inventory, monitoring and natural history of the nation's wild bees. Other grants for bee research are also in jeopardy. U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley of Oregon said America's pollinators are in 'grave danger,' and he'll fight for the federal funding. Pollinators contribute to the health of the planet, the crops we grow and the food we eat, he said. 'Rather than taking bold action to protect them, the Trump administration has proposed a reckless budget that would zero out funding for critical research aimed at saving important pollinators,' he said in a statement to The Associated Press. Harrison said his research on this topic would come to a halt if cuts are made to his federal funding, and it would be more difficult in general for scientists to study the disappearance of bees and other pollinators and improve how they prevent these losses. Not being able to manage these pollinator deaths could cause the price of fruits, vegetables, nuts, coffee and chocolate to jump or become scarce. 'Hopefully, even if such research is defunded in the U.S., such research will continue in Europe and China, preventing these extreme scenarios,' said Harrison. ___