Monday, August 11, 2025

 

Surprisingly diverse innovations led to dramatically cheaper solar panels



New research can identify opportunities to drive down the cost of renewable energy systems, batteries, and many other technologies.




Massachusetts Institute of Technology





CAMBRIDGE, MA – The cost of solar panels has dropped by more than 99 percent since the 1970s, enabling widespread adoption of photovoltaic systems that convert sunlight into electricity.

A new MIT study drills down on specific innovations that enabled such dramatic cost reductions, revealing that technical advances across a web of diverse research efforts and industries played a pivotal role.

The findings could help renewable energy companies make more effective R&D investment decisions and aid policymakers in identifying areas to prioritize to spur growth in manufacturing and deployment.

The researchers’ modeling approach shows that key innovations often originated outside the solar sector, including advances in semiconductor fabrication, metallurgy, glass manufacturing, oil and gas drilling, construction processes, and even legal domains.

“Our results show just how intricate the process of cost improvement is, and how much scientific and engineering advances, often at a very basic level, are at the heart of these cost reductions. A lot of knowledge was drawn from different domains and industries, and this network of knowledge is what makes these technologies improve,” says study senior author Jessika Trancik, a professor in MIT’s Institute for Data, Systems, and Society.

Trancik is joined on the paper by co-lead authors Goksin Kavlak, a former IDSS graduate student and postdoc who is now a senior energy associate at the Brattle Group; Magdalena Klemun, a former IDSS graduate student and postdoc who is now an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins University; former MIT postdoc Ajinkya Kamat; as well as Brittany Smith and Robert Margolis of the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. The research appears today in PLOS ONE.

Identifying innovations

This work builds on mathematical models that the researchers previously developed that tease out the effects of engineering technologies on the cost of photovoltaic (PV) modules and systems.

In this study, the researchers aimed to dig even deeper into the scientific advances that drove those cost declines.

They combined their quantitative cost model with a detailed, qualitative analysis of innovations that affected the costs of PV system materials, manufacturing steps, and deployment processes.

“Our quantitative cost model guided the qualitative analysis, allowing us to look closely at innovations in areas that are hard to measure due to a lack of quantitative data,” Kavlak says.

Building on earlier work identifying key cost drivers — such as the number of solar cells per module, wiring efficiency, and silicon wafer area — the researchers conducted a structured scan of the literature for innovations likely to affect these drivers. Next, they grouped these innovations to identify patterns, revealing clusters that reduced costs by improving materials or prefabricating components to streamline manufacturing and installation. Finally, the team tracked industry origins and timing for each innovation, and consulted domain experts to zero in on the most significant innovations.

All told, they identified 81 unique innovations that affected PV system costs since 1970, from improvements in antireflective coated glass to the implementation of fully online permitting interfaces.

“With innovations, you can always go to a deeper level, down to things like raw materials processing techniques, so it was challenging to know when to stop. Having that quantitative model to ground our qualitative analysis really helped,” Trancik says.

They chose to separate PV module costs from so-called balance-of-system (BOS) costs, which cover things like mounting systems, inverters, and wiring.

PV modules, which are wired together to form solar panels, are mass-produced and can be exported, while many BOS components are designed, built, and sold at the local level.

“By examining innovations both at the BOS level and within the modules, we identify the different types of innovations that have emerged in these two parts of PV technology,” Kavlak says.

BOS costs depend more on soft technologies, nonphysical elements such as permitting procedures, which have contributed significantly less to PV’s past cost improvement compared to hardware innovations.

“Often, it comes down to delays. Time is money, and if you have delays on construction sites and unpredictable processes, that affects these balance-of-system costs,” Trancik says.

Innovations such as automated permitting software, which flags code-compliant systems for fast-track approval, show promise. Though not yet quantified in this study, the team’s framework could support future analysis of their economic impact and similar innovations that streamline deployment processes.

Interconnected industries

The researchers found that innovations from the semiconductor, electronics, metallurgy, and petroleum industries played a major role in reducing both PV and BOS costs, but BOS costs were also impacted by innovations in software engineering and electric utilities.

Noninnovation factors, like efficiency gains from bulk purchasing and the accumulation of knowledge in the solar power industry, also reduced some cost variables.

In addition, while most PV panel innovations originated in research organizations or industry, many BOS innovations were developed by city governments, U.S. states, or professional associations.

“I knew there was a lot going on with this technology, but the diversity of all these fields and how closely linked they are, and the fact that we can clearly see that network through this analysis, was interesting,” Trancik says.

“PV was very well-positioned to absorb innovations from other industries — thanks to the right timing, physical compatibility, and supportive policies to adapt innovations for PV applications,” Klemun adds.

The analysis also reveals the role greater computing power could play in reducing BOS costs through advances like automated engineering review systems and remote site assessment software.

“In terms of knowledge spillovers, what we've seen so far in PV may really just be the beginning,” Klemun says, pointing to the expanding role of robotics and AI-driven digital tools in driving future cost reductions and quality improvements.

In addition to their qualitative analysis, the researchers demonstrated how this methodology could be used to estimate the quantitative impact of a particular innovation if one has the numerical data to plug into the cost equation.

For instance, using information about material prices and manufacturing procedures, they estimate that wire sawing, a technique which was introduced in the 1980s, led to an overall PV system cost decrease of $5 per watt by reducing silicon losses and increasing throughput during fabrication.

“Through this retrospective analysis, you learn something valuable for future strategy because you can see what worked and what didn’t work, and the models can also be applied prospectively. It is also useful to know what adjacent sectors may help support improvement in a particular technology,” Trancik says.

Moving forward, the researchers plan to apply this methodology to a wide range of technologies, including other renewable energy systems. They also want to further study soft technology to identify innovations or processes that could accelerate cost reductions.

“Although the process of technological innovation may seem like a black box, we’ve shown that you can study it just like any other phenomena,” Trancik says.

###

This research is funded, in part, by the U.S. Department of Energy Solar Energies Technology Office.

 

An innovative system that dehydrates fruit without heat



American Chemical Society
An innovative system that dehydrates fruit without heat 

image: 

A pilot test of this system using vacuum and calcium chloride successfully dried apple and mango, matching moisture levels in commercial products.

view more 

Credit: Luis Bastarrachea




Dried fruit is a tasty snack or sweet addition to recipes, but the water removal process often requires heat and energy. In a step toward more sustainable food preservation, researchers reporting in ACS Food Science & Technology have developed a method to dry food at room temperature by adjusting air pressure conditions and using food-safe calcium chloride. In a proof-of-concept, the system successfully dried mango and apple slices to commercial levels.

Dehydrating food turns perishable items such as fruit into long-lasting pantry staples. Most tabletop and industrial-scale food dehydrators use circulated hot air to remove moisture, which is simple and effective but requires a lot of energy. Sun-drying foods uses mostly solar energy but is slow and darkens the final products. So, Luis Bastarrachea is developing food preservation processes that don't require heat. In this recent study, the moisture-adsorbing salt calcium chloride, an ingredient used in cheese and molecular gastronomy applications, was incorporated into a room-temperature dehydration method and tested to see if it would impact the drying fruit’s color.

The researchers built a no-heat dehydrating chamber with three sets of screens above a container of calcium chloride solution. They placed mango and apple slices on the screens and then compared two room-temperature drying methods: one with the chamber at standard air pressure and the other under a slight vacuum.

After four days under standard air pressure, the calcium chloride solutions drew out and adsorbed less moisture from the fruits than those placed under vacuum. The fruit slices at standard air pressure also dried inconsistently. Slices on the top screen contained 50-70% water (by weight) and those on the bottom had 20-30% water after the dehydration process. In contrast, the vacuum-assisted method produced consistently dried mango and apple pieces made up of about 30% moisture, which is similar to the amount in commercially available dried fruit, and represented a removal of approximately 95% of the initial water mass. Vacuum-dried mango pieces kept the raw fruit’s attractive bright yellow color; however, the two dehydration methods darkened the apples by similar amounts. In addition, scanning electron microscopy images showed breakdown of starch granules in all the samples, but more of them broke down under standard pressure, suggesting that the vacuum-assisted method slows down deterioration mechanisms and retains freshness.

And the water pulled out of the fruit could potentially be reused. Bastarrachea says that “the collected water in the calcium chloride solution can be removed by evaporation, and the reconcentrated calcium chloride solution can be reutilized in more dehydration cycles.” Ultimately, the recovered water could be used in industrial applications or further treated for human consumption.

The authors acknowledge funding from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Agriculture and Food Research Initiative. 


Mango slices dried on different tiers (labeled as top, middle and bottom) inside a dehydrating chamber retained the bright yellow color of raw mango.

Credit

Luis Bastarrachea

###

The American Chemical Society (ACS) is a nonprofit organization founded in 1876 and chartered by the U.S. Congress. ACS is committed to improving all lives through the transforming power of chemistry. Its mission is to advance scientific knowledge, empower a global community and champion scientific integrity, and its vision is a world built on science. The Society is a global leader in promoting excellence in science education and providing access to chemistry-related information and research through its multiple research solutions, peer-reviewed journals, scientific conferences, e-books and weekly news periodical Chemical & Engineering News. ACS journals are among the most cited, most trusted and most read within the scientific literature; however, ACS itself does not conduct chemical research. As a leader in scientific information solutions, its CAS division partners with global innovators to accelerate breakthroughs by curating, connecting and analyzing the world’s scientific knowledge. ACS’ main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus, Ohio.

Registered journalists can subscribe to the ACS journalist news portal on EurekAlert! to access embargoed and public science press releases. For media inquiries, contact newsroom@acs.org.

Note: ACS does not conduct research but publishes and publicizes peer-reviewed scientific studies.

Follow us: Facebook | LinkedIn | Instagram

 

PSU researchers release final report in landmark project exploring impacts of Measure 110 decriminalization




Portland State University





Portland State University researchers have released the final findings in a three-year project examining the impacts of multiple drug policy shifts including Measure 110 which decriminalized drug possession in Oregon. The report is released in the wake of a significant policy reversal: Oregon's House Bill 4002, enacted in 2024, re-criminalized possession as a misdemeanor and established a new system to refer individuals to treatment.

Associate Professors Kelsey Henderson and Christopher Campbell, along with Professor Brian Renauer, conducted the three-year project, supported by the National Institute of Justice. The study scrutinized trends in law enforcement, prosecution, sentencing and public safety outcomes, utilizing both state data and insights gathered from interviews with decision-makers.

“The goal of this final report was to pull together all of the major findings from the years prior, and focus on major system trends and public safety outcomes,” Henderson said. “Additionally, we wanted to explore the ways in which state trends tend to mask how things might differ across urban and rural counties.”

The Year One report examining arrest, search and seizure trends and police officer perceptions was released in 2023. The Year Two report released in 2024 explored the role of the criminal justice system in connecting people to drug treatment, and examined criminal justice metrics (arrests and drug court participation) in the context of treatment resources. The final installment, however, delves into the multifaceted impacts of broader criminal justice reforms on public health and safety. This includes assessing not only Measure 110, but also the 2013 Justice Reinvestment Act, which reduced mandatory minimum marijuana sentences and diverted more drug offenses to probation, and the 2017 House Bill 2355, which "defelonized" possession of Schedule 1 or 2 controlled substances to misdemeanors. Perhaps most notably, the researchers found little evidence that Measure 110 was responsible for rising crime or overdose deaths. Instead, their analysis points to the COVID-19 pandemic and the widespread emergence of fentanyl as the primary drivers behind a surge in drug-related deaths.

“In the lead-up to HB 4002, many claimed that Measure 110 was responsible for rising crime and overdose deaths. However, our findings offer little to no support for those claims,” Campbell said. “While the rollout of M110 had real problems, and trends varied somewhat by county, by 2023 most metrics in drug arrests, charges, and crime rates were all either declining or stable at relatively low rates. Meanwhile, drug-related deaths began climbing rapidly before M110, peaked in 2023 and were starting to recede, though remain high going into 2024. What we observed was far from a causal connection to M110, rather, we saw an unprecedented impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and fentanyl on public health and safety outcomes.”

Rising crime rates and drug-related deaths that were attributed to post-COVID changes like Measure 110, were actually a return to pre-COVID levels.

“Of all the events we examined, the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the justice system the most, more so than any legislation. We observed COVID-19 pandemic impacts on arrests, charges, convictions, and probation and jail admissions,” Renauer said. “That being said, the pandemic shifts provided a reset to a lot of the trends, which allowed us to examine how and why some numbers returned to a pre-pandemic level while others did not.”

The 2017 "defelonization" policy led to a notable decrease in felony possession of controlled substance (PCS) charges, accompanied by a rise in misdemeanor PCS charges. However, with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and the implementation of Measure 110 in 2021, both felony and misdemeanor charges experienced a sharp decline. Misdemeanor PCS charges, which peaked at 600-700 per month statewide in 2019, leveled off to fewer than 200 per month by 2024.

Despite decreasing dismissal rates since the 2013 Justice Reinvestment Act, there was an unexpected sharp increase in conviction rates for drug possession charges post-Measure 110, rising from 35% to nearly 65%. This may stem from the types of charges being filed, likely involving larger quantities of substances. Drug court enrollments, however, stayed relatively stable during decriminalization despite expressed concerns that enrollments would be impacted.

“Defelonization had a clear impact on charging practices. As expected, felony charges dropped, and misdemeanor charges rose,” Renauer said. “While overall this meant that people had less severe charges, we found that a similar number of defendants were still implicated in the system overall. Nevertheless, defelonization was one of the most visible and sustained shifts in how Oregon handled low-level drug cases, and it was widely supported by justice officials.”

Ultimately, the report underscores "the importance of accessible behavioral health services, economic stability and social support in mitigating the impacts of substance use and enhancing public health and safety." The findings challenge simplified causal narratives around various drug policy shifts, and suggest that broad societal factors and multiple aspects of the legal system play a critical role that are often overlooked in complex issues.

The findings from this study offer suggestions for the implementation of deflection efforts across the state. State and county officials can use this study as a possible baseline to gauge the implementation of deflection compared to the defelonization era. Most importantly, success with deflection will not just depend on re-criminalization but on whether new treatment pathways are accessible, adequately resourced, and appropriately coordinated across agencies.

“As the state experiences yet another shift to reform drug laws, we have to keep in mind that the good intentions of the reforms can often fall prey to the convenience of practice. Deflection will only be as successful as we allow it to be,” Campbell said. “Our findings show that policy change alone isn’t enough. Unless deflection is backed by buy-in from all agencies involved in a meaningful effort to engage, then the good intentions of reform risk becoming symbolic rather than transformational.”

 

Is the 'love hormone,' oxytocin, also the 'friendship hormone'?



Lack of oxytocin signaling delays the formation of relationships and creates deficits in long-term peer relationships




University of California - Berkeley

Social prairie voles huddling 

image: 

Prairie voles are highly social, forming monogamous mating relationships, as well as peer relationships akin to human friendships. Studying the hormones involved in social bonding could help scientists understand human social interactions and disorders that hinder the formation of close relationships.

view more 

Credit: Annaliese Beery lab/UC Berkeley





A new UC Berkeley study shows that the so-called love hormone, oxytocin, is also critical for the formation of friendships.

Oxytocin is released in the brain during sex, childbirth, breastfeeding and social interactions and contributes to feelings of attachment, closeness and trust. Never mind that it’s also associated with aggression; the hormone is commonly referred to as the "cuddle" or "happy" hormone, and people are encouraged to boost their oxytocin levels for better well-being by touching friends and loved ones, listening to music and exercising.

But recent studies involving the prairie vole have called this love association into question. They've shown that oxytocin, which in the brain acts as a neuromodulator, is not essential for long-term mate bonding, or "social monogamy," or for parenting behavior, though without it, voles take longer to form such bonds.

Scientists focus on prairie voles because, like humans, they form stable and selective relationships. While most studies focus on mate bonds, the Beery lab at UC Berkeley is particularly interested in selective peer relationships, analogous to human friendships. Such studies could shed light on human psychiatric conditions, such as autism and schizophrenia, that interfere with a person’s ability to form or maintain social bonds.

"Prairie voles are special because they allow us to get at the neurobiology of friendship and how it’s similar to and different from other types of relationships," said Annaliese Beery, a UC Berkeley associate professor of integrative biology and neuroscience and senior author of the study.

Beery and integrative biology graduate student Alexis Black, one of two first authors of the study, found that prairie voles that lack oxytocin receptors take longer than normal voles to form peer relationships. Prairie voles that are close friends typically huddle side by side, groom and even sit on one another.

"Oxytocin seems to be particularly important in the early formation phase of relationships and especially in the selectivity of those relationships: 'I prefer you to this stranger,' for example," Beery said. "The animals that didn't have intact oxytocin signaling took longer to form relationships. And then when we challenged those relationships by making new groups, they lost track of their original partners right away."

The voles, genetically modified in the UC San Francisco laboratory of collaborator and co-author Dr. Devanand Manoli, also lacked the social rewards that normally come from selective attachments — they didn't work very hard to snuggle up with their friends and were less avoidant of and less aggressive towards strangers.

"In other words, oxytocin is playing a crucial role not so much in how social they are, but more in who they are social with, their selectivity," she said.

Lacking oxytocin receptors also changed the regulation of oxytocin availability and release in the brain, which the group documented using a novel oxytocin nanosensor in collaboration with postdoctoral fellow Natsumi Komatsu and Markita Landry, a UC Berkeley professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering.

“That helped us understand the feedback consequences of lacking this receptor, and how oxytocin signaling was altered in the brain,” said Beery.

The study was published Aug. 8 in the journal Current Biology.

What social voles tell us about social humans

Beery has long been interested in social relationships in rodents, focusing primarily on the animals' seldom-studied peer or friendship relationships. While voles are her main focus, she believes studying similar behaviors across multiple species is key to determining what’s species-specific versus generalizable across species.

To complement her laboratory research, she has conducted field studies comparing social behavior and oxytocin receptor distribution in the brain within and across species in a group of South American rodents and North American Belding’s ground squirrels, which vary in whether or not they live in groups. She also recently began field tests of multiple vole species — there are about 50 worldwide — to compare their social behavior.

She suspects that in rodents such as voles, and perhaps in other mammals, the formation of peer relationships may have preceded the evolution of monogamous mating relationships.

"While most rodents prefer to interact with unfamiliar individuals, it turns out that the majority of vole species we’ve tested in our early trials form peer-partner preferences, which is what we call these selective friendships. So there seems to be this widespread tendency to bond," Beery said. "But only a couple of those species are also monogamous. Someday, I hope to be able to tell you, 'Do selective peer relationships precede the development of monogamy? Is that why monogamy has evolved so many times in this genus?' I think this familiarity preference is deeply rooted."

Beery was a co-author of a 2023 study led by Manoli that threw into question the association of oxytocin with sex and parenting. That study showed that prairie voles unable to respond to oxytocin exhibit the same monogamous mating, attachment and parenting behaviors as regular voles. Those voles had been genetically engineered to have no cellular receptors for oxytocin, and were the same voles used in the current study.

But while oxytocin isn’t essential for eventual bond formation, additional studies by the same group published in 2024 showed that these receptor-deficient (or “null mutant”) prairie voles took about twice as long as normal voles to establish a relationship with a potential mate.

Interested in how the lack of an oxytocin receptor affects voles' friendship bonds, as opposed to mating bonds, Beery and Black conducted three sets of experiments. In one, they tested how long it took for voles to establish a preference for a partner. Whereas normal voles take about 24 hours of close proximity to form a relationship that makes them choose that partner over a stranger, oxytocin receptor-deficient voles showed no preference in that amount of time, and took up to a week to establish a peer preference.

"Wild-type animals form this incredibly robust preference within one day of co-housing, but the null mutants have no sign of a relationship after 24 hours. After a week, they mostly get there, and the lifetime partners look no different from each other," Beery said. "Our conclusion from that experiment is that oxytocin isn't required to have a relationship, but it's really important in those early phases of a relationship to facilitate it happening quickly and efficiently."

They then put long-term pair-bonded voles in a party-like, mixed-group situation: an enclosure with other voles and many rooms connected by tubes. In such a situation, normal voles would hang out with known friends until they eventually started to socialize with strangers.

"They can all separate, they can all come together, or they can hang out in any combinations that they want," she said. "The wild-type animals keep track of who they know. It's like if I went to a party with a friend, I would stand near that friend for the first part of the party and then I might start to mingle. The voles that lack oxytocin receptors just mixed. It was as if they didn't even have a partner in there with them."

In the third experiment, they tested the strength of both peer and mate bonding by having the voles press levers to get access to either a friend/mate or a stranger.

"Female wild-type voles typically press more to get their partner than to get a stranger, in both peer and mate relationships. The oxytocin receptor deficient mutants also press more to get to their mating partner, but not for peer relationships," Beery said. "That makes sense at some level because we think mate relationships are more rewarding than peer relationships, or at least they depend more on reward-signaling pathways."

Lack of oxytocin signaling thus not only delays the formation of relationships, but also creates deficits in long-term peer relationships.

On the flip side, voles lacking oxytocin receptors were also less aggressive toward strangers and less avoidant of them. 

“You can see contributions of oxytocin signaling to both sides of selectivity," Beery said. "On the prosocial side, it’s involved in wanting to be with a known friend or peer, while on the antisocial side, it’s aiding in rejecting an unfamiliar animal. We’ve seen effects of oxytocin on both affiliation and aggression in our other studies in prairie voles, and it parallels human findings on a role of oxytocin in in-group/out-group dynamics.”

Oxytocin nanosensors

The researchers used a new oxytocin sensor developed in Landry's UC Berkeley lab to determine whether lack of an oxytocin receptor caused increases or decreases in oxytocin release. If oxytocin release increased in these voles, it could potentially interact with a receptor for a similar neuropeptide that is also involved in formation of social relationships, compensating for the absence of oxytocin receptors.

Landry, an associate professor in the departments of chemical and biomolecular engineering, neuroscience, and molecular and cell biology and a co-corresponding author of the paper, created these sensors from carbon nanotubes joined with specific single-stranded DNA sequences selected because they latch onto the oxytocin molecule and fluoresce. Komatsu and Landry found no excess of oxytocin in the voles' brains. In fact, oxytocin was being released in lower amounts from fewer sites in the nucleus accumbens, a key brain region for social reward across species.

Co-authors with Black, Komatsu, Beery, Landry and Manoli are Jiaxuan Zhao, Scarlet Taskey and Nicole Serrano of UC Berkeley, and Ruchira Sharma of UCSF. Beery's work was supported by the National Science Foundation (CAREER award 2239635) and the National Institutes of Health (R01MH132908). Komatsu is now an assistant professor at the University of Illinois.