this post was submitted on 02 Mar 2026
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This is really cool news!
The article title focuses on the two different types of energy input, but as everybody's noticed, the rain provides such a tiny amount of output that it doesn't contribute more than a watt or two over a whole panel. Put that on hold for a minute and let's look at some other exciting parts of this:
So this research group in Spain comes along and says, "Hey everybody, check this out! We got a twofer: we can make solar panels more durable and just as efficient by putting them in a box and spraying them with hot gas! Pretty great, right? Oh, but wait! There's more! The stuff we're coating the panels with can also give you a trickle of energy just when it rains! The raindrops bouncing off the panels, I'm serious. That's enough kinetic energy to drive a tiny potential. It's not a lot, but it's still better than two for one!"
Now let's go back to the tiny bit of electricity produced by rain. These panels might be able to generate enough power to trickle charge a small battery (like on a weather station that tracks data) when it rains. With the way we've been engineering things like LEDs and sensors to be smaller and more energy efficient, we'd be able to use these solar panels to keep them running without needing any other energy source. It's totally fucking free, doesn't take anything at all from the panel or its efficiency to drive something like a sensor on a train track that can immediately send a localized signal when there's a track failure or maintenance needs to be done. If you spread those sensors out over an entire rail system, you could offload an incredible amount of work without doing anything more than installing the new panels and getting it going. Improving rail safety (especially in a place like America where the rails are so bad and so inadequately maintained due to capitalist pressures that the trains are a gamble every time they run) with something as clean, simple, automated, and inexpensive as this is incredibly solarpunk stuff. I'm not a person of vision, so really I'm excited to see where they go next. Most of what I'm thinking about right now is municipal/government and industrial stuff, things that would give repair crews more information on the problems they're being sent out to fix instead of just "sensor offline" messages. Beyond improving industrial safety through greater automation of simple functions, disaster response/recovery times could also see some seismic changes. I'm fuzzier on the consumer side of things, but small things like solar roofing providing power to automated garden switches or illuminated house numbers and doorbells that don't need to be wired into the house are all steps towards us consuming less energy. I just think that's neat!