by tb » Wed 16 Jun 2004, 22:11:39
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('clv101', 'W')e were thinking about using narrow copper pipes and an array of lenses focusing the sun’s energy from a larger area down onto the pipes. Would these intermittent very hot spots on the pipe produce a more efficient system overall?
The difficulty of course is keeping the lens focused on the pipe as the sun moves through the day!
Away back in the dark ages (the early to mid eighties), I was a student at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas. At the time, the College of Engineering had an experimental Rankine cycle power plant using a solar concentrator for a heat source. The concentrator was an array of fixed mirrors that all focused on a line that moved as the sun went across the sky. A steam generator, which was basically a length of pipe with tubing wrapped around it, was mounted on a drive mechanism that held the steam generator in the focus line. The steam was used to run a turbine.
Once the OPEC, the Saudis, and everyone else started producing enough oil to bring down prices and thereby starve the old USSR of hard currency through its own oil exports (the commies' oil was more expensive to produce than than that of the Saudi's), everybody forgot all about the Ayatollah Khomeini, gas prices, and common sense. As a result, Tech ended up shutting down the project and sending the power plant to somewhere in North Africa. The last I heard (1988) about it was being used to pump water.
Later, when I was a grad student, we found two bowl facets (that's what we called the mirrors) in our wind tunnel lab and took them outside to play with them. We accidentally set a tree on fire.
Was the thing practical? Well, I don't know, but it was pretty cool engineering.
Get your guns up!