Using a magnifying glass on a solar panel has a tantalizing promise—it can potentially boost the power output of your solar panel, translating to more energy savings and a reduced carbon footprint.
The super focusing properties of magnifying glass have lit the paper on fire. The idea is simple, can we use a magnifying glass to increase our solar production? Yes, we can. The concept of concentrating solar power is an understudy for over a decade now, and scientists are close to making a breakthrough product in the photovoltaic industry.
For one: Magnifying glasses increase heat intensity in a focused area, but the photovoltaic process that makes solar marvelous is based on light, not temperature. High heat is not friendly to most building materials, ultimately including solar panels, although they are designed to function well north of three digits Fahrenheit.
While this is an interesting concept and not categorically implausible, we don't know of anyone who has made such a notion practical yet.* For one: Magnifying glasses increase heat intensity in a focused area, but the photovoltaic process that makes solar marvelous is based on light, not temperature.
Concentrated solar power (CSP) systems utilize sunlight to generate electricity using reflecting equipment such as troughs or mirrors. As far as energy storage and efficiency are concerned, CSP is superior since it uses TES technology to store energy.
Integrity is a trade skill, too. As to the plausibility of magnifying glasses magnifying energy output: A few years ago IBM actually experimented with this idea to improve solar energy output. To achieve it, IBM incorporated a liquid metal thermal cooling system onto ordinary PV cells.
So we have only seen concentrating solar power in large thermal power plants. It works on a fundamental principle of focusing the direct sunlight to a receiver that intelligently passes it to some storage. The heat energy in the storage passes on to the thermodynamic cycle to produce electricity.