It's no wonder that the future of renewable energy is a hybrid of technology and mimicry of nature.  The sunflower has evolved over many thousands of years to efficiently harvest the energy of the sun.
 

Researchers engineer solar energy system capable of heliotropism
Researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison have taken a lesson from nature in developing a new kind of 
solar energy system.
 The system may be capable of harvesting solar radiation more 
efficiently throughout the day as it would adapt to the changing 
position of the sun. The system is based on a phenomenon that 
researchers have observed in sunflowers. Throughout the day, sunflowers 
will rotate from east to west, with their leaves also changing position 
in order to harvest as much solar power as they can. This process is 
called heliotropism.
New system adapts to the position of the sun
Researchers have engineered a solar energy system that is capable of 
mimicking heliotropism quite accurately. While it is not the first solar
 energy system that is capable of seeking out the sun and positioning 
itself for maximum exposure, it does not use the conventional 
GPS-directed method of these systems. Instead, researchers leveraged the
 properties they have seen in innovative materials that allow for the 
passive adaptation of the system to the position of the sun.
LCE’s and carbon nanotubes enable heliotropism
The system is comprised of a combination of liquid crystalline 
elastomer (LCE) and carbon nanotubes. LCE’s are exhibit change contrast 
and contraction when exposed to heat. Carbon nanotubes have the ability 
to absorb a wide range of light waves, making them valuable components 
to a solar energy system. The solar energy system is equipped with a 
mirror, which focuses sunlight onto an array composed of LCE’s and 
carbon nanotubes. When the LCE’s are heated, they contrast, allowing the
 system to bend toward the source of heat, thereby enabling the system 
to track the movements of the sun.
Solar energy system made possible through emergence of new materials
Though this is a simplistic approach to the harvest of solar energy, 
it has only been made possible due to the emergence of new materials in 
the past few years. These materials have allowed researchers to 
experiment with new solar energy systems and make these systems more 
efficient and capable of generating electricity through the collection 
of sunlight.
 
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