sexta-feira, julho 24, 2009

Parabolic Trough Solar Concentrator - Wolfram Demonstrations Project

Designing a parabolic trough solar concentrator requires specifying:

• the collector aperture,

• the focal length,

• the size of the tube located at focus,

• the degrees out of focus possible before the trough needs to be refocused.

This Demonstration was written to aid in the design of hand-operated solar peanut roasters for use in developing countries. The material in the tube can be peanuts for roasting, bread for baking, water for heating, etc., or simply air to be heated for drying crops. All dimensions are in millimeters.

Parabolic Trough Solar Concentrator - Wolfram Demonstrations Project

Technology Review: A Cheaper Solar Concentrator

 A Cheaper Solar Concentrator

A new light-guiding optic combines low cost with high efficiency.

By Tyler Hamilton

Nicolas Morgan holds up a square piece of clear, molded acrylic about a centimeter thick and shines a penlight directly at its flat surface. A green beam enters the acrylic and bends toward the center of the square. Morgan repeats the process at different points on the surface, and each time, the beam darts toward the center.

Guiding light: Morgan Solar’s high-precision optic--part acrylic and part glass--is molded so that light is trapped and bounces toward its center. A secondary glass optic concentrates the light to 1,000 suns and directs it to a tiny, high-efficiency solar cell. The low-profile design promises to reduce the cost of manufacturing and transportation.
Credit: Morgan Solar

The acrylic component--called a Light-Guide Solar Optic (LSO)--is a new type of solar concentrator that could significantly lower the cost of generating electricity from the sun. Unlike existing designs, there's no need for mirrors, complex optics, or chemicals to trap and manipulate the light. "It's pure geometric optics," says Morgan, director of business development at Toronto-based Morgan Solar.

Solar concentrators have emerged in recent years as a way to intensify the amount of sunlight hitting solar cells, which are the most expensive part of solar panels. To make solar power more affordable, engineers have sought to use less solar-cell material by concentrating sunlight onto much smaller spaces.

But this approach has its own challenges. Most concentrators tend to be complex systems that use special lenses, curved mirrors, and other optical components with a "nonzero" focal length. This means that there must be enough distance--an air gap--between the solar cell and the optic to properly focus the light. As a result, concentrator-based systems are usually packaged within bulky enclosures, with enough depth to accommodate the focal length and protect all components during shipping. This means higher material and assembly costs and more expensive shipping.

A couple of years ago, Nicolas's brother John Paul Morgan came up with the idea of a solid-state solar concentrator system: a flat, thin acrylic optic that traps light and guides it toward its center. Embedded in the center of Morgan Solar's concentrator is a secondary, round optic made of glass. With a flat bottom and convex, mirrored top, the optic receives the incoming barrage of light at a concentration of about 50 suns and amplifies it to nearly 1,000 suns before bending the light through a 90-degree angle.

Unlike other concentrators, the light doesn't leave the optic before striking a solar cell. Instead, a high-efficiency cell about the size of an infant's thumbnail is bonded directly to the center bottom of the glass optic, where it absorbs the downward-bent light. There's no air gap, and there's no chance of fragile components being knocked out of alignment.

"It's all about critically controlling the angles once the light enters the first optic," explains Nicolas Morgan. The design takes advantage of a phenomenon called total internal reflection--the angle at which a beam of light inside an optical material will reflect back into the material rather than escape.

Technology Review: A Cheaper Solar Concentrator

solar concentrator posts - Green Tech - CNET News

 

Skyline Solar has designed a solar concentrator that relies on more sheet metal and less silicon to cut costs.

The Mountain View, Calif.-based start-up on Monday introduced its product, called High Gain Solar (HGS) arrays, and said that it has raised an additional $24.6 million from New Enterprise Associates and other investors. It's one of six companies to get a Department of Energy grant worth $3 million for solar photovoltaics research.

Its arrays, expected to be available later this year, are targeted at commercial customers and utilities looking to generate from about 100 kilowatts to megawatts worth of electricity. The company has a 24-kilowatt demonstration facility at a plant in San Jose, Calif., with the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority.

(Credit: Skyline Solar)

Skyline Solar's concentrator is built around a reflective metal trough that concentrates light onto strips of monocrystalline silicon cells. A tracking system follows the sun over the course of the day so that sunlight bounces onto the cells directly.

By concentrating the light onto these cells, Skyline Solar says it can deliver 10 times more energy per gram of silicon compared with traditional flat solar panels.

Because silicon is an expensive material, there are a number of solar companies using concentrators to squeeze more electricity from solar cells. Skyline Solar CEO Bob MacDonald founded the company after leaving SolFocus, a company that uses more expensive, high-efficiency solar cells and mirrors to concentrate light 500 times.

Skyline Solar's troughs concentrate the light by only a factor of 10 but its arrays use relatively few parts and those parts can be manufactured with existing equipment, such as that for car factories. An air-cooled heat sink is placed behind the solar cells to improve efficiency.

Skyline Solar concentrates light onto strips of monocrystalline silicon cells (bottom) rather than using traditional flat panels.

(Credit: Skyline Solar)

The market for midsize solar arrays is growing, Travis Bradford, solar industry analyst at the Prometheus Institute for Sustainable Development, told Technology Review.

Utility giant Pacific Gas & Electric expects to install 500 megawatts worth of solar power in part through midsize solar installations. Other potential customers include industrial facilities with enough land and good sun.

But it's unclear that Skyline Solar's design will be much cheaper on balance because the tracking and mounting system adds costs and the prices for traditional flat solar panels are dropping, Bradford said.

solar concentrator posts - Green Tech - CNET News

Resultados da pesquisa de http://www.greenspec.co.uk/images/energy/pvcells/solarcell.jpg no Google

 solar sundial

Resultados da pesquisa de http://www.greenspec.co.uk/images/energy/pvcells/solarcell.jpg no Google

color shading cell Products , China color shading cell Manufacturers, China color shading cell Suppliers, Made in China, Exporters,

 

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Resultados da pesquisa de http://www.corpserv.nrc.ca/images/photos/0804_solar.jpg no Google

 

Resultados da pesquisa de http://www.corpserv.nrc.ca/images/photos/0804_solar.jpg no Google

domingo, março 18, 2007

Top 10 Sites For Web Designers

Recursos valiosos a explorar
clipped from tutorialblog.org

Top 10 Sites for Web Designers

Alistapart - One of the oldest published by Happy Cog, Alistapart always delivers indepth and though provoking articles.

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Designers Talk - Web Design and Development forums

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Vitamin - By Carsonsystems, Vitamin offers high quality content on web design and web2.0 from some of the biggest names in the business.

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Design Meltdown - Covers the trends in web design, usefull blog split into categories for elements, techniques, colors etc.

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UX Magazine - The user experience magazine, Well written site covering Strategy, Design, Technology and Information.

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Design Feed - An RSS agregator of hundreds of different design-related feeds

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Type For You - A Typgraphy blog

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Pingmag -Tokyo based magazine about all kinds of Design

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Digital Web Magazine - Articles for web professionals

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9Rules Design - A community of high quality blogs about design

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Smashing Magazine - Daily resources for web designers

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