BEIJING, June 20 (Xinhuanet) -- A new type of solar energy collector 
made from inexpensive aluminum tubing and mirror strips can 
concentrate sunlight by a factor of 1,000 to melt steel or produce 
steam.

"This is actually the most efficient solar collector in existence," 
said Doug Wood, an inventor based in Washington state who patented 
key parts of the dish's design - the rights to which he has signed 
over to a team of students at MIT. "They really have simplified this 
and made it user-friendly, so anybody can build it."

To test the 12-foot-wide mirrored dish prototype this week, MIT 
mechanical engineering Spencer Ahrens put a plank of wood in the beam 
and generated an almost instant puff of smoke.

The contraption does more than burn wood, of course. At the end of a 
12-foot aluminum tube rising from the center of the dish is a 
black-painted coil of tubing that has water running through it. When 
the dish is pointing directly at the sun, the water in the coil 
flashes immediately into steam.

Ahrens and his teammates have started a company, RawSolar, to mass 
produce the dishes. They could be set up in huge arrays to provide 
steam for industrial processing, or for heating or cooling buildings, 
as well as to hook up to steam turbines and generate electricity, 
according to an MIT statement. Once in mass production, such arrays 
should pay for themselves within two years or so with the energy they 
produce, the students figure.

"I've looked for years at a variety of solar approaches, and this is 
the cheapest I've seen," said MIT Sloan School of Management lecturer 
David Pelly, in whose class the project first took shape last fall. 
"And the key thing in scaling it globally is that all of the 
materials are inexpensive and accessible anywhere in the world."



Comments from Jeff Schwartz, an EVI resident who works in the solar field:

This is solar thermal. There are 3 or 4 existing utility scale plants 
in California right now. There are also 4-5 larger ones contracted 
for by utilities in Arizona and California. The desert is perfect for 
this. A 200 by 200 mile square of the Arizona desert equipped with 
solar thermal would produce as much electricity as is currently used 
in the U.S.. With an extra 50 miles we could store enough for 
overnight usage. This would be huge if a lot of rich people didn't 
want to sell coal and oil.



The MIT design uses a series of flat mirrors, cheap(er) to make / 
assemble. Here's a background / supporting article directly from MIT: 
< 
<http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2008/solar-dish-0618.html>http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2008/solar-dish-0618.html>
 
The team at MIT has formed a new company to produce these simplified 
solar dishes: <<http://www.rawsolar.com/>www.RawSolar.com> RawSolar, 
Inc. is currently a privately held company and is actively seeking 
qualified investors. For more information please contact us at: < 
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] >
Peace is every step
Thich Nhat Hanh
-- 
_______________________________________________
For more information about sustainability in the Tompkins County area, please 
visit:  http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/ 

RSS, archives, subscription & listserv information for:
[email protected]
http://lists.mutualaid.org/mailman/listinfo/sustainabletompkins
free hosting by http://www.mutualaid.org

Reply via email to