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  <title><![CDATA[Here Comes the Sun | Shining a Light on Solar Energy]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<h1>Once you notice the sound, it’s hard to unhear.&nbsp;The low, clicking whirr fills every gap of&nbsp;silence in Ajeet Rohatgi’s office. It’s the toys, the&nbsp;delicate wood and metal figurines arranged atop&nbsp;one of the professor’s sagging bookshelves—an airplane,&nbsp;an oil rig, a windmill. They move as long as&nbsp;the sun shines through his glass-block window.</h1><p>The toys are simple things, set into motion by palm-sized&nbsp;solar cells, and the process of converting sunlight into electricity&nbsp;seems fairly simple, too: Sunlight hits the cells and is&nbsp;absorbed, then separated by a silicon semiconductor into positive&nbsp;and negative charges, creating a batterylike current of&nbsp;electrons that’s shuttled off to power the adjacent contraption.&nbsp;Presto! But Rohatgi, regent’s professor of electrical engineering&nbsp;at Georgia Tech, knows firsthand that the bigger picture&nbsp;of photovoltaic energy is far more complex.</p><p>Rohatgi is the director of Georgia Tech’s University Center&nbsp;of Excellence for Photovoltaics Research and Education—the&nbsp;first-ever such center sponsored by the U.S. government—as&nbsp;well as the founder and chief technical officer of Suniva, a&nbsp;manufacturer of solar cells and modules that spun out of his&nbsp;work at the Institute.</p><p>These days, his life is defined by photovoltaic research, and&nbsp;he talks about his lab and his &nbsp;students with an affable, fatherly&nbsp;pride. But his career was once on a much different path.&nbsp;After earning his undergraduate degree in electrical engineering&nbsp;from the Indian Institute of Technology, he received a&nbsp;master’s degree in materials engineering from Virginia Polytechnic&nbsp;Institute and then a PhD in metallurgy and materials&nbsp;science from Lehigh University. It wasn’t until he joined the&nbsp;team at the Westinghouse Research and Development Center,&nbsp;where he became a Westinghouse fellow, that his interest&nbsp;in photovoltaic energy surfaced.</p><p>“I had the option to work in solar or work in integrated circuits,&nbsp;[but] my heart was in PV because I felt it was just a&nbsp;great technology to work on—if I can do something, I can&nbsp;make a difference,” he says, sitting behind a spacious wooden&nbsp;desk in his Van Leer building office. “I got into that, and I&nbsp;stayed in this field because I firmly believe in it, that this can&nbsp;have a very positive impact on so many things—the lives of the&nbsp;people, the environment, national security.”</p><p>The transformative potential of solar energy is massive, but&nbsp;it’s nowhere close to being effectively harnessed. Sunlight is&nbsp;free and present in unlimited quantities all over the globe, and&nbsp;it can’t be sequestered or fought over like so many other natural&nbsp;resources. And its source should be hanging around for&nbsp;another five billion years or so. “It’s as if somebody created a&nbsp;fusion reactor for you in a safe place, which is far away,” Rohatgi&nbsp;says of the sun. “We know solar electricity has no&nbsp;undesirable impact on the environment you just can’t have&nbsp;a better source. It has been designed for us.”</p><p>Rohatgi says that if he could develop a magic box to catch&nbsp;all the sunlight that shines down upon our planet over the&nbsp;course of just one hour, that would be enough to power human&nbsp;life on earth for one year. Taking a more realistic&nbsp;approach, he’s set his sights on producing a solar cell capable&nbsp;of hitting 20 percent—that is, converting 20 percent of the&nbsp;sunlight that falls on the cell surface into usable energy. And&nbsp;in working toward this goal, both at Tech and with Suniva, he&nbsp;is motivated by one mantra: “We will not make high-efficiency&nbsp;cells just for the sake of high efficiency.” The aim is to&nbsp;develop photovoltaic cells that are both maximally efficient&nbsp;and maximally cost-effective, never compromising quality for&nbsp;cost or cost for quality. And that issue of cost is crucial: Solar&nbsp;needs to be competitive with fossil fuel, the current and longstanding&nbsp;energy paradigm, in order to gain any traction in the&nbsp;marketplace.</p><p>When Rohatgi started at Westinghouse in 1977, solar was&nbsp;still a fledgling industry. Just a few years before, in 1975, PV&nbsp;energy had been 80 times more expensive than fossil fuel. And&nbsp;in 1985, when he joined the faculty at Tech, there was nothing&nbsp;happening on campus in the way of photovoltaic research.&nbsp;So he decided to build a lab from the ground up—plumbing,&nbsp;equipment, furniture, everything. After years in industry&nbsp;R&amp;D, he was primed to move fast and write aggressive proposals;&nbsp;he recruited students, raised funds and maintained&nbsp;the ever-expanding lab as colleagues gawked at his speed.&nbsp;Sometimes he wondered why he poured so much time and energy&nbsp;into the project when he could just teach his classes and&nbsp;head home at the end of the day. “In some ways you’ve created&nbsp;this elephant that you have to keep feeding,” he says of the&nbsp;lab’s early days. “But if it is done through passion, that’s the&nbsp;main thing.”</p><p>His passion is real. Growing up in India, Rohatgi witnessed&nbsp;the impact of electricity—or, more specifically, a lack thereof—on a first-hand basis. In villages and urban centers alike,&nbsp;electric power regularly shuts off for hours at a time. Although&nbsp;most people have figured out ways to work around the outages,&nbsp;Rohatgi knows solar energy would be a massive boon. “In&nbsp;many villages, at nighttime, nobody would work. If you could&nbsp;just put one solar panel on the roof they get three, four hours&nbsp;of electricity,” he says. “I’ve seen villages where there was nothing&nbsp;there, and now they have small industry coming up, just because they got a few additional hours of electricity. It is&nbsp;changing the lives of a lot of people.”</p><h1>In 1992, Rohatgi’s lab was established as a&nbsp;University Center of Excellence, which required industry engagement&nbsp;in addition to the educational component:&nbsp;companies come to the lab with a problem, and Rohatgi and&nbsp;his students forge a solution.</h1><p>Meanwhile, the lab’s research&nbsp;continued on its steady course to 20 percent; it hit 17, then 18.&nbsp;Rohatgi was feeling good about the progress. But he was baffled&nbsp;when, in 2006, he was approached by NEA, a venture&nbsp;capital firm that doesn’t exactly make a habit of approaching&nbsp;anyone. The firm wanted to help him start a solar company,&nbsp;to start commercially producing the cells his lab had been&nbsp;working so hard to perfect.</p><p>Rohatgi wasn’t sure—he thought he should get to 20 percent&nbsp;before branching out into a business. But the NEA folks&nbsp;said it was the lowest-risk investment they’d ever make: “They&nbsp;said whenever they make investment in companies, sometimes&nbsp;people have never even made a device,” Rohatgi recalls.&nbsp;With 25 years of experience and the world’s best solar panels&nbsp;under his belt, it was easy for the NEA to put their trust in Rohatgi.&nbsp;They told him, “Yes, granted, you’re not at your goal of&nbsp;20 percent, but … take our money and get there.”</p><p>And so, with NEA’s assistance, Rohatgi set about building&nbsp;the team that would launch Suniva in 2007. First up was John&nbsp;Baumstark, now CEO, who came to the company with two decades’&nbsp;experience in business development and management.&nbsp;“I had the connections, I had the knowledge, I had the technology,&nbsp;I had the vision, but he had this team and the idea&nbsp;about running a company,” Rohatgi says. “It worked out beautifully.&nbsp;The most unique feature of Suniva, the reason it took&nbsp;off so quickly and so fast, is because of this complement—the&nbsp;business team and the technology.”</p><p>These days, Rohatgi splits his time between his lab on Tech’s&nbsp;campus and the Suniva offices in Norcross, Ga., a suburb of&nbsp;Atlanta. The lab and Suniva have separate R&amp;D departments,&nbsp;but they share knowledge and talent—and the company’s&nbsp;close relationship with the Institute isn’t its only distinguishing&nbsp;factor. Suniva has pioneered a number of unique&nbsp;technologies, including ion implantation (long used in making&nbsp;chips, but never before in photovoltaics), which improved&nbsp;the efficiency of their cells by one percent and reduced the total&nbsp;number of steps needed to build a cell by two.</p><p>That’s huge, and it reflects Rohatgi’s key approach: to improve&nbsp;the quality and cost of his end-products by improving&nbsp;the process by which they are created. Suniva works with what&nbsp;he calls “the DNA of the whole value chain,” improving the efficiency&nbsp;and function of every element involved in the solar&nbsp;cell, from raw material to manufacturing processes. “If I make&nbsp;more efficient solar cells I need less material, and if I make&nbsp;more efficient solar cells I need fewer panels to install,” Rohatgi&nbsp;says. And when solar panels are smaller and more&nbsp;efficient, it means more of them could potentially be installed—on the roof of a factory, say, or a private&nbsp;home—maximizing the amount of energy produced.</p><p>Rohatgi thinks his products will be able to hit 20 percent&nbsp;soon, and he predicts the price of solar energy is about to&nbsp;match that of fossil fuel. That means solar may finally start&nbsp;catching on in the broader consumer market. (In some states,&nbsp;thanks largely to government subsidies, it already has. Lower&nbsp;manufacturing costs—aided by lower wages, made possible&nbsp;in part by more lax labor laws—mean it’s closer to happening&nbsp;in China than anywhere else, though there are a few big markets&nbsp;across Europe.)</p><p>Rohatgi says he can now make a cell in the lab that could&nbsp;yield up to 23 percent—but if he’s learned one thing since&nbsp;starting Suniva, it’s a reverence for manufacturing. The most&nbsp;stunning advancements in the lab hardly matter if you don’t&nbsp;have the means to replicate them in the real world in a scalable,&nbsp;cost-effective way.</p><h1>As Rohatgi has been guiding Suniva&nbsp;to produce better solar cells, Suniva has been teaching him&nbsp;about running a successful business. The importance of building&nbsp;a solid team was an early lesson.</h1><p>“You can have the world’s greatest technology, but if you&nbsp;don’t know how to run the business, it would not go anywhere,”&nbsp;he says. “[You need] the full package, from the&nbsp;scientist to the entrepreneur.”</p><p>John Baumstark was the first addition to the Suniva team,&nbsp;but the employee roster has since grown to almost 200,&nbsp;including a number of Rohatgi’s former students and other Tech alumni.</p><p>Like Rohatgi, Vijay Yelundur, MSE 97, PhD MSE 03, was&nbsp;impressed by the potential of solar energy at a young age.&nbsp;“When I was around 6 years old, we took a trip to Yellowstone&nbsp;National Park, and I saw someone using a solar cooker. And&nbsp;I became fascinated with the idea of using sunlight to cook&nbsp;food or to produce power,” he remembers.</p><p>After wrapping up his undergraduate degree, Yelundur was&nbsp;eyeing grad school and picked the one subject he thought&nbsp;could hold his interest: solar energy. His father ran across an&nbsp;article about Rohatgi’s program in a trade journal and mentioned&nbsp;it to his son, who had no idea there was a solar research&nbsp;group in the basement of Tech’s double-E building. Rohatgi&nbsp;became his thesis adviser, and Yelundur was one of Suniva’s&nbsp;earliest hires, joining the company as a senior engineer. He&nbsp;now serves as manager of the Manufacturing Innovation&nbsp;Center.</p><p>Before founding Suniva, Rohatgi says, he was largely divorced&nbsp;from the business side of the solar industry. His&nbsp;education had prepared him for a career in research, sealed&nbsp;off in a lab wrangling samples and hypotheses, so he’s had to&nbsp;play some catch-up. Increasingly, though, his students are suffering&nbsp;no such gap, thanks in part to Institute initiatives like&nbsp;the InVenture Prize, the University-Industry Demonstration&nbsp;Partnership and Enterprise to Empower, all of which foster&nbsp;entrepreneurship as a component of academic research.</p><p>“When you don’t know about these things it looks so difficult,&nbsp;but once you know [more, it’s] not that difficult. In fact,&nbsp;once I found out about [the process of starting a business], I&nbsp;was like, ‘Oh, seeing how it’s done, it’s not that complicated,’”&nbsp;Rohatgi says. “There’s a lot of talk about this on campus—that&nbsp;you should train the students from the very start, that it is not&nbsp;very difficult to learn things about business, but that you just&nbsp;have to have a different aptitude. It’s a great thing.”</p><p>And, unlike in Yelundur’s&nbsp;day when the PV lab was out of&nbsp;sight and out of mind, the center now occupies a more visible&nbsp;space on campus: the ground floor of the Van Leer building,&nbsp;facing the Tech Green. Rohatgi can take a few steps out of his&nbsp;office and see the 86-kilowatt array of Suniva panels installed&nbsp;on the roof of the state-of-the-art Clough Undergraduate&nbsp;Learning Commons. The panels are set to produce up to&nbsp;120,000 kWh per year, offsetting more than 80 tons of carbon&nbsp;dioxide. In 1996, just before the Olympic games, Rohatgi&nbsp;and his crew installed what was then the world’s largest solar&nbsp;array on the roof of the Olympic natatorium (now the CRC),&nbsp;but that was different—they were someone else’s panels. He&nbsp;becomes giddy describing what it’s like to see his own work out in the world.</p><p>“If you get an opportunity to take something you built … out&nbsp;in the real world, there’s nothing more exciting,” he says. “It&nbsp;was a thrill for me to see the panels, the cells from my factory&nbsp;being installed … because if I am doing it [in the lab], that’s&nbsp;nice, but nobody knows. But now when they’re out in the field,&nbsp;it’s a different sense of pride and satisfaction. It’s really, really&nbsp;nice to even have this opportunity that is right in front of&nbsp;my office. It’s very satisfying.”</p><p><em>This story originally appeared in Volume 88, Issue 2, of the Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine.</em></p>]]></body>
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