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Nepalese Teen Invents Cheap Solar Panel Using Human Hair

by Bridgette Meinhold, 09/09/09

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Did you know that melanin, the pigment in hair, is light sensitive and can be used as a conductor? Well, that’s what an 18 year old in Nepal recently discovered, and is now using human hair to replace silicon in solar panels. Since the price of hair is considerably cheaper than silicon, this enterprising youth may have just found a breakthrough technology to help bring down the cost of solar and give thousands of people in developing nations access to affordable renewable energy.


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Malin Karki had already been trying to create affordable renewable energy from hydro currents for a few years, but the project had become too expensive. But then Karki, who attends school in Kathmandu, started reading a book by Stephan Hawking that discussed ways of creating static energy from hair. From this idea, Karki realized that melanin was one of the factors in energy conversion, and that it could possibly serve as a substitute conductor. He and four other classmates worked on a prototype, which they found could charge a cell phone or a pack of batteries for lighting.

The panels themselves are 15 inches square and can produce 9V or 18W of power and cost around $38 to produce. Karki thinks that if they were mass produced though, they would cost half as much. In Nepal, human hair costs about 25¢ for half a kilo and can last for several months. Hair is also basically a renewable resource and can be replenished by the owner of the solar panel as it wears out. This low cost and low tech device could be a revolutionary step in solar power bringing down the cost of the technology, bringing power to the masses and using materials which are common to everyone in the  world.

Via Dvice & Daily Mail

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9 Responses to “Nepalese Teen Invents Cheap Solar Panel Using Human Hair”

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Bman Says:

Honestly… that is some crazy shit! To think, we very well begin harvesting hair for power.

Wow, life sure is strange.

What wonderful forward thinking by this young and insightful man. I hope he patents that idea before someone else profiteers (i.e. Edison).

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hagandazs Says:

I smell BS…

9V at 18 watts = 2 AMPS at 9 volts. The teenager is lying, the summary is lying, or whole thing is fake.

2A across hair… A coathanger running 2A would probably melt, and we expect 2A across hair to be fine?

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This is a complete hoax. Hair is an insulator; see http://www.rafischer.com/hairtest.htm . Melanin does have some semiconductor properties as described here https://www.researchgate.net/publication/16014151_Semiconductor_properties_of_natural_melanins but it isn’t possible to use human hair as shown to generate electricity. I personally did some experiments and confirmed this.

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Holy biophilia batman!

ecopacker
ecopacker Says:

India is a key supplier of hair (dead and alive) to salons across the globe, an India hair weave (live hair) can cost the American woman between $2,000 to $4,000 a head based on length.
I WOULD LOVE TO SEE THE AMERICAN WOMAN FORGOING THEIR HAIR EXTENSIONS FOR ENERGY PRODUCTION.
Good Luck!

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nugz Says:

Demmm that’s some thinking right there. Too bad Africans men don’t have long hair, i would have get myself 1 of those right away and sustain it with my own hair..Funny.

That’s some cool innovation there and really commend you guys. The future depends on such ideas. Keep it up.

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That’s really weird. Where do you get all of that hair? I guess I better start raiding the local barber shops.

Until then, there are some DIY techniques that make solar power affordable for the average homeowner. This site has some reviews of the top solar panel guides:
http://www.reviewsuncensored.com

enjoy!
Jon

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taraff1 Says:

You can build your own solar panels for UNDER $100 and Solar Water Heater for about $7 with the Ambigrid Plans!

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the effort is wonderful, it will be better to describing how it works.

 

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