Skip to content

QualityPoint Technologies News

Emerging Technologies News

Menu
  • About Us
  • Technology
  • Medical
  • Robots
  • Artificial Intelligence (AI)
  • 3D Printing
  • Contact Us
Menu

Huge Discount Offer: 14 ebooks + 2 courses

Tinted solar panels could boost farm incomes

Posted on August 6, 2020

Researchers have demonstrated the use of tinted, semi-transparent solar panels to generate electricity and produce nutritionally-superior crops simultaneously, bringing the prospect of higher incomes for farmers and maximising use of agricultural land.

By allowing farmers to diversify their portfolio, this novel system could offer financial protection from fluctuations in market prices or changes in demand, and mitigate risks associated with an unreliable climate. On a larger scale it could vastly increase capacity for solar-powered electricity generation without compromising agricultural production.

This is not the first time that crops and electricity have been produced simultaneously using semi-transparent solar panels – a technique called ‘agrivoltaics’. But in a novel adaptation, the researchers used orange-tinted panels to make best use of the wavelengths – or colours – of light that could pass through them.

The tinted solar panels absorb blue and green wavelengths to generate electricity. Orange and red wavelengths pass through, allowing plants underneath to grow. While the crop receives less than half the total amount of light it would get if grown in a standard agricultural system, the colours passing through the panels are the ones most suitable for its growth.

Laboratory analysis of the spinach and basil leaves grown under the panels revealed both had a higher concentration of protein. The researchers think the plants could be producing extra protein to boost their ability to photosynthesise under reduced light conditions. In an additional adaptation to the reduced light, longer stems produced by spinach could make harvesting easier by lifting the leaves further from the soil.

News Source: University of Cambridge

Share

Related News:

  1. Device makes clean water with paper and sunlight
  2. New, portable tech sniffs out plant disease in the field
  3. Technique could enable cheaper fertilizer production
  4. Enhancing the Performance of Perovskite Solar Cells (PSCs) with ‘Graphene Armor’
Master RAG ⭐ Rajamanickam.com ⭐ Bundle Offer ⭐ Merch ⭐ AI Course

  • Bundle Offer
  • Hire AI Developer

Latest News

  • MIT Researchers Unveil New Framework to Test AI Privacy Risks in Clinical Models January 6, 2026
  • MIT Researchers Develop AI-Driven Robot That Builds Furniture From Text Prompts December 17, 2025
  • Kling O1: A New Breakthrough in AI Video Creation December 4, 2025
  • Coactive: Teaching AI to See and Understand Visual Content June 10, 2025
  • Harvard Sues Trump Administration Over International Student Ban May 23, 2025
  • Stanford Researchers Develop AI Agents That Simulate Human Behavior with High Accuracy May 23, 2025
  • ​Firebase Studio: Google’s New Platform for Building AI-Powered Applications April 11, 2025
  • MIT Researchers Develop Framework to Enhance LLMs in Complex Planning April 7, 2025
  • MIT and NVIDIA Unveil HART: A Breakthrough in AI Image Generation March 25, 2025
  • Can LLMs Truly Understand Time Series Anomalies? March 18, 2025

Pages

  • About Us
  • Basics of 3D Printing
  • Key Innovations
  • Know about Graphene
  • Privacy Policy
  • Shop
  • Contact Us

Archives

Developed by QualityPoint Technologies (QPT)

QPT Products | eBook | Privacy

Timesheet | Calendar Generator

©2026 QualityPoint Technologies News | Design: Newspaperly WordPress Theme