 We're the nanotechnology team from Forsyth Technical Community College in Winston-Salem, North Carolina and we're competing in the National Science Foundation's Community College Innovation Challenge 2016. And here at Forsyth Tech our team has been focusing on one of the biggest issues facing our country and that's energy. The U.S. energy mandate states that by 2035 we have to be 80% power by renewable energies and right now we're only generating under 18%. This means the market Moscow Drupal in the next 19 years. We have long been able to generate solar energy with traditional solar cells, however these products are bulky, expensive and fragile and there's a great market demand to both revolutionize and economize them. Our team has put together a new application to enhance next generation transparent and flexible solar cells with record-breaking conversion. We decided to demonstrate this application by fabricating an energy-efficient solar greenhouse, which not only saves you money by generating free electricity to power lights, heat lamps and fans, but after further research it also protects plastic covers by increasing the lifespan of plastic greenhouses. This could not make more sense for a commercial-scale greenhouse farmer who potentially spends into the thousands per month on electricity, gas and the cost of replacing their plastic covers every one to four years. This is just one marketable idea that shows how our application could benefit the energy and agriculture sector and pave the way for many new energy harvesting applications and that is what it takes to be innovative.