Submitted by Phat_Potatoes t3_zsodcq in askscience
So I just saw this product that collects sunlight and concentrates it to cook food with or boil water, so generating energy using the heat of the sun came to my mind by scaling this product to boil water and generate electricity by steam turbine (like fossil fuel plants) instead of using the Sun's light energy by Solarpanals, so my question is which one is more efficient and easier to scale and implement?
Edit: I just realised a typo in the title, Steam*, sadly I can't correct it.
aspheric_cow t1_j1d7gxn wrote
One big disadvantage of solar thermal is that it doesn't work when it's cloudy. Conventional (photovoltaic) solar panels work fine with the diffuse light from an overcast sky, but you cannot focus diffuse light to create high temperature.
It's also mechanically complicated. Not only do you need a turbine (or Stirling engine) but you also need a tracking device to adjust the mirror angle continuously. Whereas conventional solar panels have no moving parts at all.