Solarwindow Technologies Inc
We were incorporated in the State of Nevada on May 5, 1998, under the name “Octillion
Corp.” On December 2, 2008, we amended our Articles of Incorporation to
effect a change of name to New Energy Technologies, Inc. Effective as of March
9, 2015, we amended our Articles of Incorporation to change our name to SolarWindow
Technologies, Inc.
We are exclusively focused on the commercialization, continued development
and refinement of, and the marketing of our SolarWindow™ technology including,
but not limited to, the development and design of, and the bringing to market
of, products derived from our SolarWindow™ technology.
At the time of this filing, our proprietary patent-pending SolarWindow™
see-through (“transparent”) electricity-generating coatings are the
subject of sixty (60) U.S. and international patent filings.
Our SolarWindow™ technology provides the ability to harvest light energy
from the sun and artificial sources and generate electricity from a transparent,
coating of organic photovoltaic (“OPV”) solar cells, applied to
glass and plastics, thereby creating a “photovoltaic” effect. Photovoltaics
are best known as a method for generating electric power by using solar cells
to convert energy from the sun into a flow of electrons. Typically, conventional
PV power is generated by making use of solar modules composed of a number of
cells containing PV and electricity-conducting materials. These materials are
usually opaque (i.e., not see-through) and only effectively generate electricity
with sun light, Our researchers have replaced these materials with compounds
that allow our SolarWindow™ technology to remain see-through or “transparent,”
while generating electricity when exposed to either sun or artificial light.
Initially being developed for application on glass surfaces, SolarWindow™
could potentially be used on any of the more than eighty-five (85) million commercial
and residential buildings in the United States alone.
We are continuing commercialization, continued development and marketing process
directly through joint venture agreements with private entities and, in part,
under the auspices of a Stevenson-Wydler Cooperative Research and Development
Agreement (the “NREL CRADA”) with the Alliance for Sustainable Energy,
LLC (the “Alliance for Sustainable Energy”), which is the operator
of The National Renewable Energy Laboratory (“NREL”).