This document provides an overview of six concentrating solar technologies: parabolic troughs, compact linear Fresnel reflectors, solar furnaces, parabolic dishes, solar central receivers, and lens concentrators. It discusses the operation and major components of these systems as well as examples of current projects using concentrating solar power technologies for electricity generation and industrial processes. Technical challenges in developing concentrating solar collectors are also reviewed.
To download, head to - http://solarreference.com/cspalliance-csp-thermal-energy-storage-presentation/
Also available at CSP alliance website. Key information includes - direct comparison of a CSP power plant with a conventional power plant, importance of thermal energy storage and the fact that deployment would lead to much more cost reduction than r&d.
For colelction of similar resources, head to -
http://solarreference.com
concentrated solar power technology - cspSANTHOSHRAJ60
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1) The document discusses various concentrated solar power technologies including parabolic trough systems, power tower systems, dish Stirling systems, and Fresnel collectors. It provides details on how each technology works and examples of projects in India.
2) Global CSP markets are dominated by Spain and the US, but costs are decreasing and markets are expanding. India has some CSP projects but significant potential for growth.
3) The document outlines environmental impacts of CSP including water use and effects on wildlife, and discusses future technologies like solar chimneys and solar ponds. It also mentions potential future technologies like microwave transmitting satellites.
This document provides an overview of concentrating solar power technologies. It discusses the principles of concentrating sunlight to generate heat and electricity. It compares existing CSP technologies like parabolic troughs, central receivers, and dish Stirling systems. It also outlines the solar power potential in India and commercially deployed CSP projects like the Andasol plant in Spain. Key challenges and development measures to advance CSP are summarized.
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The document summarizes the development of concentrated solar power (CSP) technology. It states that CSP has significant potential to transform the energy system by providing renewable energy at scale. It then outlines the history and growth of CSP from 1984-2014, with installed capacity growing from 354 MW to 4.5 GW. It also predicts continued growth, with the world reaching 260 GW by 2030 and 983 GW by 2050. The document discusses the two main CSP technologies and the importance of thermal energy storage. It highlights Spain's leadership in CSP development from 2008-2013 and the Basque Country's role in supplying the Spanish industry.
To download, head to - http://solarreference.com/cspalliance-csp-thermal-energy-storage-presentation/
Also available at CSP alliance website. Key information includes - direct comparison of a CSP power plant with a conventional power plant, importance of thermal energy storage and the fact that deployment would lead to much more cost reduction than r&d.
For colelction of similar resources, head to -
http://solarreference.com
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target). The high energy at this point of concentrated sunlight is transferred to a substance that can store
the heat for later use. The more recent heat transfer material that has been successfully demonstrated is
liquid sodium. Sodium is a metal with a high heat capacity, allowing that energy to be stored and drawn
off throughout the evening. That energy can, in turn, be used to boil water for use in steam turbines.
Water had originally been used as a heat transfer medium in earlier power tower versions (where the
resultant steam was used to power a turbine). This system did not allow for power generation during the
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Presentation from the New Mexico Regional Energy Storage & Grid Integration Workshop: Concentrating Solar Power and Thermal Energy Storage, presented by Clifford Ho, Sandia National Laboratories, August 23-24, 2016.
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This document discusses concentrating solar power (CSP) technologies. It describes the six main CSP technologies: parabolic trough, parabolic dish, power tower, and concentrating photovoltaic. Parabolic trough technology was selected for further analysis due to its commercial availability. CSP has the potential to provide up to 25% of global energy needs by 2050 as costs decrease from $0.12-0.18/kWh currently to $0.05/kWh or less in the future. India has over 1,300 MW of installed solar power capacity across various states led by Gujarat.
Bill Gould, CTO at SolarReserve, presented at the GW Solar Institute Symposium on April 19, 2010. For more information visit: solar.gwu.edu/Symposium.html
Concentrating solar power (CSP) harnesses the sun's energy through technologies like parabolic troughs, power towers, and thermal energy storage. It can generate electricity even when the sun is not shining by storing solar energy as heat. CSP is well-suited for areas with abundant sunlight like India's deserts and is a key technology for providing renewable energy at scale. While CSP projects are currently capital intensive, ongoing research and larger deployments are expected to drive down costs and allow CSP to compete with traditional power sources.
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The document discusses solar thermal energy technology and its advantages over photovoltaic and fossil fuel energy sources. Solar thermal uses concentrated sunlight to create heat that can power steam turbines or engines to generate electricity, allowing for efficient heat storage. Major players like eSolar, Brightsource, and Abengoa plan to beat the price of coal-generated power and expand solar thermal projects around the world. While the technology faces challenges of land use and competition with cheap coal, further technological improvements could allow solar thermal energy to become more economical and competitive on a large scale.
Solar power plants can generate electricity either directly using photovoltaic cells or indirectly using concentrated solar power that heats a liquid to power steam turbines. Concentrated solar power systems use lenses or mirrors to focus sunlight and heat a liquid for steam generation. Photovoltaic cells convert sunlight directly into electricity through the photovoltaic effect. Solar power has advantages of no fuel costs or pollution but higher initial costs than other technologies.
This document discusses various types of solar power technologies including concentrated solar power (CSP) and photovoltaics (PV). It describes several CSP systems - parabolic troughs, solar power towers, Stirling dishes, and linear Fresnel reflectors. It also discusses PV systems and their components. The document outlines advantages and disadvantages of solar power and different storage methods. It explains why India needs to adopt CSP technologies given its energy scenario and policy targets for renewable energy.
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The solar power tower (also known as 'Central Tower' power plants or 'Heliostat' power
plants or power towers) is a type of solar furnace using a tower to receive the focused sunlight. It uses
an array of flat, moveable mirrors (called heliostats) to focus the sun's rays upon a collector tower (the
target). The high energy at this point of concentrated sunlight is transferred to a substance that can store
the heat for later use. The more recent heat transfer material that has been successfully demonstrated is
liquid sodium. Sodium is a metal with a high heat capacity, allowing that energy to be stored and drawn
off throughout the evening. That energy can, in turn, be used to boil water for use in steam turbines.
Water had originally been used as a heat transfer medium in earlier power tower versions (where the
resultant steam was used to power a turbine). This system did not allow for power generation during the
evening
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油
The document discusses the potential for using supercritical carbon dioxide (sCO2) power cycles for concentrating solar power (CSP) applications. It provides a history of closed Brayton cycles and why sCO2 cycles are attractive, noting their higher efficiency than steam and ability to integrate with CSP. The document outlines sCO2 cycle designs for CSP and research needs. It describes the Supercritical Transformational Electric Power initiative to demonstrate a 10 MWe sCO2 cycle to advance the technology towards commercial viability.
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油
Concentrated solar thermal power generation uses mirrors to collect and concentrate sunlight to produce steam and drive turbines to generate electricity. It has several advantages over photovoltaic solar generation including the ability to store thermal energy for generating electricity when the sun is not shining. The document discusses the history and development of concentrated solar thermal technology. It describes the basic working principle and four main types - parabolic trough, power tower, solar dish, and Fresnel reflectors. Advantages include no fuel costs and ability to generate power 24/7 with thermal storage, while disadvantages are high initial costs and large land requirements. The current global installed capacity is around 4.8 GW with India's first plant coming online in 2013 with a planned
Presentation from the New Mexico Regional Energy Storage & Grid Integration Workshop: Concentrating Solar Power and Thermal Energy Storage, presented by Clifford Ho, Sandia National Laboratories, August 23-24, 2016.
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油
Abengoa is committed to solar thermal power and has pioneered development in tower and parabolic trough technologies. With regard to solar power alone, currently the company has an installed capacity of 2.3 GW油 in operation worldwide.
This document discusses concentrating solar power (CSP) technologies. It describes the six main CSP technologies: parabolic trough, parabolic dish, power tower, and concentrating photovoltaic. Parabolic trough technology was selected for further analysis due to its commercial availability. CSP has the potential to provide up to 25% of global energy needs by 2050 as costs decrease from $0.12-0.18/kWh currently to $0.05/kWh or less in the future. India has over 1,300 MW of installed solar power capacity across various states led by Gujarat.
Bill Gould, CTO at SolarReserve, presented at the GW Solar Institute Symposium on April 19, 2010. For more information visit: solar.gwu.edu/Symposium.html
Concentrating solar power (CSP) harnesses the sun's energy through technologies like parabolic troughs, power towers, and thermal energy storage. It can generate electricity even when the sun is not shining by storing solar energy as heat. CSP is well-suited for areas with abundant sunlight like India's deserts and is a key technology for providing renewable energy at scale. While CSP projects are currently capital intensive, ongoing research and larger deployments are expected to drive down costs and allow CSP to compete with traditional power sources.
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This presentation discusses trends in thermal engineering. It covers topics like combustion, heat and energy transfer, refrigeration, and thermoelectric energy. Specific applications discussed include using solar powered Stirling engines for industrial purposes, performance of biofuels as alternatives to present fuels, using nanofluids to enhance heat transfer in heat exchangers, the rise of magnetic refrigeration, and developments in exhaust systems and three-way catalytic converters. The presentation provides an introduction to thermal engineering and highlights areas of thermal/fluids science research like automotive engineering and developing more sustainable technologies.
The document summarizes concentrated solar power (CSP) technology. It discusses four main CSP designs - parabolic troughs, tower systems, linear troughs, and parabolic dishes. Parabolic troughs are the most common currently, making up over 90% of installed CSP generation capacity. Tower systems are expected to become more widely used. Molten salt is highlighted as an important development, allowing CSP plants to operate at higher temperatures and efficiencies while enabling thermal energy storage for electricity generation after sunset or when solar irradiance is low.
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The document discusses solar thermal energy technology and its advantages over photovoltaic and fossil fuel energy sources. Solar thermal uses concentrated sunlight to create heat that can power steam turbines or engines to generate electricity, allowing for efficient heat storage. Major players like eSolar, Brightsource, and Abengoa plan to beat the price of coal-generated power and expand solar thermal projects around the world. While the technology faces challenges of land use and competition with cheap coal, further technological improvements could allow solar thermal energy to become more economical and competitive on a large scale.
Solar power plants can generate electricity either directly using photovoltaic cells or indirectly using concentrated solar power that heats a liquid to power steam turbines. Concentrated solar power systems use lenses or mirrors to focus sunlight and heat a liquid for steam generation. Photovoltaic cells convert sunlight directly into electricity through the photovoltaic effect. Solar power has advantages of no fuel costs or pollution but higher initial costs than other technologies.
This document discusses various types of solar power technologies including concentrated solar power (CSP) and photovoltaics (PV). It describes several CSP systems - parabolic troughs, solar power towers, Stirling dishes, and linear Fresnel reflectors. It also discusses PV systems and their components. The document outlines advantages and disadvantages of solar power and different storage methods. It explains why India needs to adopt CSP technologies given its energy scenario and policy targets for renewable energy.
This document summarizes a solar concentrator power plant. It explains that solar concentrator systems use mirrors or lenses to concentrate sunlight onto a small area to generate heat, which is then used to power steam turbines and generate electricity. The first concentrated solar power plant was built in Italy in 1968. Solar concentrators work by using Fresnel lenses to focus sunlight onto a central receiver. Future studies project that concentrated solar power could provide 25% of the world's energy needs by 2050 with increased investment. Tower designs aim to efficiently collect and store thermal energy to generate electricity even when the sun is not shining.
This document summarizes key points about various renewable energy sources including wind, solar, geothermal, and hydroelectric power. It discusses what each energy source is, provides some history and examples of implementations. Wind energy is captured from turbines converting wind's kinetic energy. Solar energy uses photovoltaic cells to convert sunlight into electricity. Geothermal energy harnesses heat from within the earth. Hydroelectric power uses the force of moving water to turn turbines and generate electricity. The document highlights examples of each type of renewable energy being utilized both globally and within states like Idaho.
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2. 2
OUTLINE
A review of six concentrating
solar technologies and current
projects.
Basics of ray tracing.
Sketch of a thermal analysis
example
3. 3
Solar Concentrating
Systems
Concentrate solar energy through use of mirrors
or lenses.
Concentration factor (number of suns) may be
greater than 10,000.
Systems may be small:
e.g. solar cooker
.... or large:
- Utility scale electricity generation (up to 900
MWe planned)
- Furnace temperatures up to 3800oC (6800oF)
4. 4
Concentrating Solar
Power:
A Revived Industry
Utility Action on ~3,000 MW in
2005-06
CSP for Commercial & Industrial
Facilities
Industrial Solar Techs Roof Specs
More planned since 2006
5. 5
States Creating a
Market for CSP
AZ: 15% RE by 2025, 30% Distributed
Generation
CA: 20% by 2010 & 33% by 2020 planned
CO: 10% by 2015
NV: 20% by 2015, 5% Solar
NM: 10% by 2011
TX: 4.2% by 2015
6. 6
In a Carbon Limited
Future
Carbon limits will close the cost gap.
CSP can scale up fast without critical
bottleneck materials. (e.g. silicon)
Costs will come down with increase in
capacity
expected to fall below natural gas in the
next few years.
In the very near future, the CSP market in the
SW US can grow to 1 to 2 GW per year.
From: http://www.nrel.gov/csp/troughnet/pdfs/2007/morse_look_us_csp_market.pdf
7. 7
Examples of CSP Applications
Power Generation:
Utility Scale: 64 MW Nevada Solar One (2007)
Buildings: 200 kW Power Roof
Thermal Needs:
Hot Water and Steam (Industrial & Commercial Uses)
Air Conditioning Absorption Chillers
Desalination of seawater by evaporation
Waste incineration
Solar Chemistry
Manufacture of metals and semiconductors
Hydrogen production (e.g. water splitting)
Materials Testing Under Extreme Conditions
e.g. Design of materials for shuttle reentry
8. 8
Primary Types of Solar
Collectors
1. Parabolic Trough
2. Compact Linear Fresnel Reflector
new
3. Solar Furnace
4. Parabolic Dish & Engine
5. Solar Central Receiver
(Solar Power Tower)
6. Lens Concentrators
Can be used in conjunction with PV:
Use lenses or mirrors in conjunction with PV
panels to increase their efficiency.
(http://seattle.bizjournals.com/seattle/stories/2006/04/24/focus2.html)
9. 9
PARABOLIC DISH
& ENGINE
SOLAR FURNACE
CENTRAL RECEIVER
SOLAR FURNACE
PARABOLIC DISH
PARABOLIC TROUGH
FRESNEL REFLECTOR
LENS CONCENTRATORS
10. 10
Major Components of
Solar Collector Systems
Concentrating mirror(s)
May use primary & secondary
concentrators.
Absorber within a Receiver
Receiver contains the absorber. It is the
apparatus that receives the solar
energy; e.g. evacuated tube. Absorber
absorbs energy from concentrator and
transfers to process being driven (engine,
chemical reactor, etc.); e.g. the pipe
within an evacuated tube.
Heliostats
Flat or slightly curved mirrors that track
the sun and focus on receiver or
concentrator. Used with solar furnaces
11. 11
Parabolic Troughs
Most proven solar concentrating
technology
The nine Southern California Edison
plants (354 MW total) constructed in
the 1980s are still in operation
12. 12
Parabolic Troughs - Operation
Parabolic mirror reflects solar energy onto a receiver (e.g.
a evacuated tube).
Heat transfer fluid such as oil or water is circulated
through pipe loop. (250oF to 550oF)
Collectors track sun from east to west during day.
Thermal energy transferred from pipe loop to process.
14. 14
Thermal Storage
Uses high heat capacity fluids as
heat transfer storage mediums
12 to 17 hours of storage will allow
plants to have up to 60% to 70%
capacity factors.
From: http://www1.eere.energy.gov/solar/pdfs/csp_prospectus_112807.pdf
16. 16
What Have Been the
Technical Challenges?
Development of Materials
Heat transfer tubes that are less prone to sagging
& breaking.
Improved surface material of heat transfer tubes.
High absorptivity, low emissivity and long-term
stability in air.
Low cost mirrors that have reflectivity and
washability of glass.
Improved Components
Flex hoses used to join sections of pipe loop were
prone to failure Replaced with ball joint
design.
Ability to track on tilted axis
Improved Processes
e.g. Generate steam directly instead of running
heat transfer fluid through heat exchanger -
17. 17
Saguaro Solar Generating Station (north of Tucson)
1MW - Compared to 395MW in natural gas fired
generating capacity at same site
Broke ground March 24, 2004 and started generating
power December 2005
Built by Solargenix, subsidiary of ACCIONA Energy
of Spain
Arizona has goal of 15% renewable energy by 2025.
$6 Million Project
First Solar Thermal Parabolic Trough
Power Plant Built in The U.S. In Nearly Two
Decades to Be Dedicated On Earth Day
(2005)
19. 19
Nevada Solar One
64 MW - 2007
Now producing 64 MW on 140 hectares
Located in Eldorado Valley (south of
Las Vegas)
One of the world's largest CSP plants.
Cost: $262 million
Developed by Solargenix Energy.
SHOTT North America provided
receivers.
Groundbreaking in February 2006
21. 21
Around the World
Granada, Spain.
Two 50 MW plants
Developed by Solar Millenium AG
Negev desert of Israel
150 MW facility to be expanded to 500
MW
Developed by Solel (successor company
to Luz)
Cost $1 billion
22. 22
Smaller Scale:
SolarGenix Power Roof
(2002)
Parker Lincoln Building
(demonstration)
Design point of 176 kW
Provides 50 tons of absorption
cooling
23. 23
Parabolic Troughs
Links for More Info
http://www.iea-ship.org/index.html
http://www.solarpaces.org/solar_trough.pdf
http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy04osti/34440.pdf
Heat Transfer Analysis:
http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy04osti/34169.pdf
Ball Joint Design:
http://www.eere.energy.gov/troughnet/pdfs/moreno_sf_i
nterconnections_with_salt_htf.pdf
28. 28
Compact Linear Fresnel
Reflectors
Lower costs compared to
parabolic troughs
Several mirrors share the same
receiver
Reduced tracking mechanism complexity
Stationary absorber
No fluid couplings required
Mirrors do not support the receiver
Denser packing of mirrors possible
Half the land area
29. 29
6.5-megawatt demonstration power
plant under construction in Portugal
(as of September 2007)
Ausra and PG&E announce purchasing
agreement for 117 MW facility located
in central California
(November 2007)
Compact Linear Fresnel
Reflectors
Projects
31. 31
Parabolic Dish/Engine -
Operation
Solar energy drives a Stirling engine
or Brayton cycle engine (gas
turbine.)
Receiver absorbs solar energy and
transfers it to the engines working
fluid.
Systems are easily hybridized since
Stirling engines can run on any
32. 32
State of Dish Technology
Mature and Cost Effective Technology: Large utility projects
using parabolic dishes are now under development.
Technical Challenges Have Been:
Development of solar materials and components
Commercial availability of a solar-izable engine.
Advantage: High Efficiency
Demonstrated highest solar-to-electric conversion efficiency
(still true with advances in CPV? No.)
Potential to become one of least expensive sources of
renewable energy. (still true with development of Fresnel reflectors?)
Advantage: Flexibility
Modular - May be deployed individually for remote
applications or grouped together for small-grid (village power)
systems.
34. 34
Stirling Engines
Stirling engines are simple, have high efficiency
(25% for industrial heat), operate quietly, have low
O&M costs (~$0.006/kWh)
Waste heat can easily be recovered by the engine,
as well as from the engine
According to one manufacturer: $1000-2000/kW
installed
But
They have higher costs for materials and
assembly, are larger for same torque, have longer
start up time (needs to warm up)
37. 37
Stirling Engine
Manufacturers
Stirling Denmark: http://www.stirling.dk/
STM Power:
http://www.energysolutionscenter.org/distgen/AppGuide/M
anf/STMPower.htm
QRMC
Infinia: http://www.infiniacorp.com
Stirling Cycles has been acquired by Infinia.
ReGen Power Systems: http://www.rgpsystems.com/
Stirling Energy Systems: http://www.stirlingenergy.com/.
Currently manufacturers large utility-scale Stirling engines for use
with solar concentrating systems. Has plans to produce engines for
use with combustible fuels in the future.
Stirling Biopower: http://www.stirlingbiopower.com/.
In the start up phase (as of July 2007)
40. 40
300 MW From 12,000 Stirling
Solar Dishes
in Imperial Valley, Southern
CA
San Diego Gas & Electric entered 20-year
contract with SES Solar Two, an affiliate of
Stirling Energy Systems in 2005.
12,000 Stirling solar dishes providing 300 MW
on three square miles
Two future phases possible that could add 600
MW
At 900 MW would be one of the largest solar facilities
in the world.
41. 41
500 MW from 20,000-Dish
Array
in Mojave Desert
Southern California Edison will
construct 500 MW solar generating
station on 4500 acres:
Approved by CPUC in Dec 2005
Using SES dishes
First phase: 20,000-dish array to be
constructed over four years
Option to expand to 850 MW.
42. 42
A news story on these two
projects
SAN DIEGO, California, US, September 14, 2005 (Refocus
Weekly) An electric utility in California will buy 300 MW of solar
power from a new facility that uses Stirling solar dishes.
San Diego Gas & Electric will buy the green power under a 20-
year contract with SES Solar Two, an affiliate of Stirling Energy
Systems of Arizona. The 300 MW solar facility will consists of
12,000 Stirling solar dishes on three square miles of land in the
Imperial Valley of southern California.
SDG&E has options on two future phases that could add another
600 MW of renewables capacity and, if the plant grows to 900
MW within ten years, it would be one of the largest solar
facilities in the world. The utility also announced the purchase
of 4 MW of energy from a local biogas landfill project.
SES says the contract is the second record-breaking solar
project it has signed in the past month, following a contract with
Southern California Edison for construction of a 4,500 acre solar
generating station in southern California. That 20-year power
purchase agreement, which also must be approved by the CPUC,
calls for development of 500 MW of solar capacity in the Mojave
Desert, northeast of Los Angeles.
The first phase will consist of a 20,000-dish array to be
43. 43
Salt River Landfill
Demonstration Project
Four 22 kW SunDishes
Each 'SunDish' is 50' high.
Stretched-membrane faceted dishes deflected to convex
form by vacuum.
Reflective surface is made of sheets of 1.0 mm low-iron
glass.
Stirling engines and generators manufactured by STM
Corporation.
Electricity is used by the landfill facilities.
Efficiency is 20% higher than other solar systems of a
similar size.
Hybrid system: Stirling engines can run on solar energy,
44. 44
STMs Sun Dish System
From: http://www.energysolutionscenter.org/distgen/AppGuide/DataFiles/STMBrochure.pdf
45. 45
Small Scale & Low Tech
Parabolic Dish with Solar Cookers
Using parabolic dish concentrators on a smaller scale...
46. 46
Solar Furnaces
Centre National de Recherche Scientifique - Odeillo, France
Largest solar furnace in the world (1 MWt)
47. 47
Solar Furnaces - Operation
Solar furnaces are used for:
- High temperature processes Solar Chemistry
- Materials testing
A field of heliostats tracks the sun and focuses
energy on to a stationary parabolic concentrator
which refocuses energy to the receiver.
Receivers vary in design depending on process:
Batch or continuous process
Controlled temperature and pressure
Collection of product (gas, solid, etc.)
48. 48
Why Run Processes in a Solar Furnace?
Higher Temperatures (up to 3800oC)
Higher temperatures are possible in solar furnace
than in conventional combustion furnace or
electric arc furnace.
Cleaner Processes
e.g. Electric arc furnaces use carbon electrodes
which often contaminate product.
Energy Sustainability
Use of renewable energy for industrial processes.
50. 50
Solar Furnaces
Technical Challenges
From test bench to commercial scale processes
Development of continuous processes from
batch experiments
Material Development
Materials suitable for very high temperatures.
Process Control
e.g. Accurate measurement of high temperatures
51. 51
CNRS Solar Furnace at
Odeillo, France
Mirror is 10 stories high and forms one side of
the laboratory
Maximum temperature is 3800oC
59. 59
Solar One
Moonrise over the Solar One Heliostat Field
Photo from http://www.menzelphoto.com/gallery/big/altenergy3.htm
60. 60
Solar Two
Solar Two improved the thermal storage of Solar One
Photo from http://ucdcms.ucdavis.edu/solar2/
61. 61
Plataforma Solar de Almeria
1.8 MW steam generator
Produces steam at 340oC and
to drive steam turbine
Thermal storage: 18-tons of Al2O3
Notice the heliostat field and the
central tower reflected in this heliostat.
62. 62
Concentrating Solar
Photovoltaics
500 kW now installed in Arizona (APS)
Concentrating sunlight 250x to 500x reduces cell cost
Amonix CPV cells are 26% efficient.
Most efficient in world for silicon until (see next slides)
With multi-junction cells, efficiency can be increased to
40%
64. 64
Lens
Concentrators
In this example, energy is concentrated on to PV
cells with lenses
(but lens systems dont necessarily have PV cells.)
40% efficiency for CPV achieved.
66. 66
Environmental Impacts
Deserts have sensitive ecosystems and low water
availability.
Land Use
The heliostat field occupies a large area of land, shading areas where
the ecosystem is accustomed to full sun.
-
Water Use
Wet cooling towers used in power generation have high water
consumption.
67. 67
Geometrical Optics:
Law of Reflection and Refraction
are the only physical laws
required for geometrical optics.
The rest is geometry How
rays of light are reflected off
surfaces or refracted through
materials.
Ray Tracing
68. 68
Law of Reflection
The incident ray and reflected ray
lie in a plane containing the
incident normal, and this normal
bisects the angle between the two
rays.
Reflection
Reference: Modern Geometrical Optics
by Max Herzberger, 1958
70. 70
Ray Tracing Example
Secondary concentrator to spread energy evenly
across a cylinder.
with a front that reflects reemitted radiation back
to the cylinder.
Reemission is not really
a single normal ray as shown,
Normal is center of distribution
of reemitted rays.
73. 73
Edge Ray Analysis
Edge ray analysis is used to do
ray tracing by hand.
Select rays to establish bounds:
Extreme angles
With maximum error.
74. 74
Analysis
Rays Enter CPC at Extreme
Angle
Perfect CPC:
Conical
approximation:
Some rays are reflected
back out without
striking the absorber.
Select cone so rejection
of rays is acceptable.
A Compound Parabolic
Concentrator focuses rays
onto an absorber without
tracking.
75. 75
Example of Secondary
Concentrator
Rays from primary concentrator focus on a pipe
imperfectly.
Design secondary mirror so many of the rays that
miss the front will reflect back to the pipe.
Select rays that represent the error of the primary
concentrator.
Ray 1 strikes front. Ray 2 misses the front,
but is reflected back.
Ray 3 misses the front
and misses the back.
76. 76
Ray Tracing by
Computer
Ray tracing by hand, you are
limited to selecting a small
number of rays.
Ray tracing by computer, you
can send in many rays.
Can look at distribution of rays
across a surface.
78. 78
Ray Tracing by Computer
Computer modeling:
Incoming rays created according to the profile of primary
concentrator.
Define surfaces of windows, reflectors and absorbers
mathematically.
Follow path of incoming rays to absorber
and reemission of rays from absorber back out of system
Determine surface temperatures and available process heat
from distribution of rays using energy balance.
Example design goals:
Minimize reflection out of receiver
Obtain even distribution across absorber surfaces
79. 79
NREL Thermal Analysis
Example
http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy04osti/34169.pdf
Consider a parabolic trough.
Receiver - Pipe with and without
evacuated tube.
From: Heat Transfer Analysis and Modeling of a Parabolic Trough Solar Receiver
Implemented in Engineering Equation Solver, R. Forristall, NREL, October 2003,
http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy04osti/34169.pdf
83. 83
Design
In your thermal analysis, you may be interested
in considering:
Length and cross-section of trough
Diameters of pipe and evacuated tube
Velocity of heat transfer fluid
Optical properties of the pipe, glass and trough
Weather data: Temperature, Insolation, Wind
Temperatures of surfaces and heat transfer
fluid.
Energy absorbed by heat transfer fluid
Vary geometry, velocity and materials to meet
your design criteria cost effectively.
85. 85
Solar News Links
The Energy Blogs Solar Thermal page:
http://thefraserdomain.typepad.com/energy/solartherma
l_/index.html
86. 86
PARABOLIC DISH
& ENGINE
SOLAR FURNACE
CENTRAL RECEIVER
SOLAR FURNACE
PARABOLIC DISH
PARABOLIC TROUGH
FRESNEL REFLECTOR
LENS CONCENTRATORS
The
End