Projections of the U. S. electrical power demands over the next 30 years indicate that the U. S. could be in grave danger from power shortages, undesirable effluence, and thermal pollution. A pollution free method of converting solar energy directly into electrical power using photovoltaics on the ground shows that sunlight falling on about 1 percent of the land area of the 48 states could provide the total electrical power requirements of the U. S. in the year 1990. By utilizing and further developing some NASA technology, a new source of electrical power will become available. Such a development is attractive from conservation, social, ecological, economic, and political standpoints. While the cost of producing solar arrays by today’s methods prohibits their use for large scale terrestrial plants, the paper suggests how the cost may become acceptable, especially as conventional fuels become scarcer and more expensive. Some of the desirable reasons for developing methods to convert solar energy to electrical power are: to conserve our fossil fuels for more sophisticated uses than just burning, to reduce atmospheric pollution by 20 percent, to convert low productive land areas into high productive land areas, to make the U. S. less dependent upon foreign sources of energy, and to learn to utilize our most abundant inexhaustable natural resource.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
April 1972
This article was originally published in
Journal of Engineering for Power
Research Papers
The Generation of Pollution-Free Electrical Power From Solar Energy
W. R. Cherry
W. R. Cherry
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Search for other works by this author on:
W. R. Cherry
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
J. Eng. Power. Apr 1972, 94(2): 78-82 (5 pages)
Published Online: April 1, 1972
Article history
Received:
July 26, 1971
Online:
July 14, 2010
Citation
Cherry, W. R. (April 1, 1972). "The Generation of Pollution-Free Electrical Power From Solar Energy." ASME. J. Eng. Power. April 1972; 94(2): 78–82. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.3445661
Download citation file:
Get Email Alerts
Cited By
Experimental Characterization of Superheated Ammonia Spray From a Single-Hole Spray M Injector
J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power (August 2025)
Foreign Object Damage of Environmental Barrier Coatings Subjected to CMAS Attack
J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power (October 2025)
Related Articles
Discussion
J. Sol. Energy Eng (February,2000)
Demonstration of Infrared-Photovoltaics for a Full-Spectrum Solar Energy System
J. Sol. Energy Eng (February,2006)
Comparative Performance and Model Agreement of Three Common Photovoltaic Array Configurations
J. Sol. Energy Eng (February,2018)
An Improved Model of Estimation Global Solar Irradiation From in Situ Data: Case of Algerian Oranie’s Region
J. Sol. Energy Eng (June,2020)
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Chapters
Risk Mitigation for Renewable and Deispersed Generation by the Harmonized Grouping (PSAM-0310)
Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Probabilistic Safety Assessment & Management (PSAM)
Conclusions
Clean and Efficient Coal-Fired Power Plants: Development Toward Advanced Technologies
Photovoltaics
Integration of Renewable Energy Systems