That's really low compared to standard solar panels at 20% efficiency, or expensive lab solar panels at 47% (output: electricity).
Basically, we have already beaten nature. Aiming to copy nature at this game is probably fruitless.
Casey Handmer, if he doesn’t die from the Kool-aid, is going to go down the path Eric Drexler went down and that anybody who thinks seriously about space colonization goes down. You can have a revolution in space travel and then you need a revolution in manufacturing… or if you have the revolution in manufacturing you don’t really need much better space travel.
He’s coming to the conclusion that Starship can’t really send enough solar panels to Mars to support a human colony so now he’s looking for a nuclear miracle. The other approach is to send a solar panel factory, but if you run numbers on it you will decide you need a solar panel factory factory that bootstraps itself and when you consider the spare parts problem conclude you need molecular assemblers or something that works as well as a molecular assembler.
You see, plants are based on molecular assemblers and are already solar panel factory factories packed into a seed.
There are 2 more steps needed to be able to do what a plant does.
The second step after capturing solar energy is to use that energy with a good efficiency to capture from the air carbon dioxide and nitrogen (perhaps also water vapor) by converting them into some simple organic substances, perhaps a simple amino-acid like glycine and some other simple HCO molecule, e.g. glycerol.
With such simple organic substances, one could feed a culture of genetically-modified fungi or other fungus-like organisms, which could produce high-quality proteins and fatty substances (there already exist genetically-modified fungus strains, e.g. of Trichoderma, which can produce whey protein or egg-white protein, i.e. much higher-quality proteins than those that can be extracted from plants).
While the first 2 stages of capturing solar energy into simple organic substances are things at which we should be able to beat nature, at the synthesis of complex organic substances like those that are necessary as food, but also for various industrial applications, there is no known method that could beat the biological enzymatic syntheses, so for such things the solution are genetically-modified bacterial or fungal organisms, not machines.
Our advanced high efficiency devices are cool but the ultimate solar devices can be something with many characteristics of the plants.
I don't understand the logic. Can you build life building blocks with solar panels? I don't think so. So your metric is irrelevant.
Yeah, except solar panels don't exactly recycle themselves.
Plants, however, do.
So "beaten" is not the word I'd use.
We are probably on the low 0.1%s of total efficiency of converting solar power into organic molecules. And it's still very capital intensive.
This isn't true until synthetic fuels are cheaper than biofuels.
As long as nature only consists of electricity. If it involves matter we might not be quite at 20% efficiency (output: physical work).
Are you really sure?
It was all fun and games until the Viagra weed got loose.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terfenadine
but they prescribed it to me about as soon as it came out. I've tried all the allegedly non-drowsy antihistamines and the only one that doesn't have CNS effects for me is
In my personal experience, cetirizine (Zyrtec) is also extremely effective and completely non-drowsy.