Solar sunflower inspired by nature could bring clean
energy anywhere
The Sunflower Solar Harvester, being
developed by the Swiss company Airlight Energy, tracks the sun like a sunflower
and cools itself by pumping water through its veins like a plant. In the
process, it produces heat, desalinated water, and refrigeration from the 12kW
of energy it produces with just 10 hours of sunlight.
Flower power
HIGHLIGHTS
- A water-cooled transportable solar power station tracks the sun like a sunflower to produce off-grid energy
- The unit can provide 12kW of power and 20kW of thermal power from just 10 hours of sunlight
- The manufacturer says the integrated technology could have great potential in remote communities
- Japan, where fossil fuel prices are high, has expressed an interest in deploying the solar harvester
.(CNN) --
Imagine a transportable solar power station that tracks the sun like a
sunflower and cools itself by pumping water through its veins just like a
plant.
The Sunflower Solar Harvester,
developed by the Swiss company Airlight Energy, can do all that and in the
process produce heating, desalinated water, and refrigeration from the 12kW of
energy it provides from just 10 hours of sunlight - enough to power several
households.
Aimed at off-grid communities in
remote regions, the all-in-one 10m-high system -- whose components can be
transported in a single container and reassembled in situ - has been in
development for more than two years and could be on sale as early as mid-2017.
Integrated system
"It's an integrated system so
it supplies both electricity and heat," head of research at Airlight
Energy, Gianluca Ambrosetti, told CNN. "You can use this heat to drive a
cooling system too, if you need refrigeration."
"It's not going to work so well
if you have a lot of requirements and you have the climate of, say,
Germany."
Nevertheless, off-grid regions from
as disparate and far-flung places as North Africa, the Middle East, the United
States, Chile and Australia have expressed an interest in the technology.
"Then there are those regions
that have good solar radiation and high fossil fuel prices such as Japan which
is not an obvious place for this sort of system, but where we see a lot of
potential," Ambrosetti said.
Water-cooled
At the core of the technology are IBM-designed
water-cooled solar panels whose microchannels carry away the heat produced by
the reflector mirrors. The flower-like array of reflectors concentrate the
sun's energy more than 2,000 times onto the six panels which each hold 25
photovoltaic chips.
The heat is carried away by the
water at a rate that keeps the microchips at their optimum temperature, making
the Sunflower Solar Harvester one of the most efficient solar energy producers
around.
Developers say that it needs just a
quarter of the panels to produce the same amount of power as conventional
systems.
Everything about its design is aimed
at bringing down costs; what would normally require large and expensive solar
mirrors is achieved with metallised foil of the type found in food packaging
like potato chips.
The concave shape of the reflectors
is kept in place by a light vacuum, a useful failsafe if the cooling system
fails. Rather than overheating the solar cells, the operator can simply release
the vacuum to diffuse the reflected sunlight.
Remote appeal
While the company is not claiming
the technology will completely replace fuel-powered generator sets -- which can
often produce 10 times the power of one solar sunflower -- Ambrosetti said it
could be possible to run some remote facilities with an array of the parabolic
mirrors.
"You would, of course, not have
just one Sunflower but several so you can scale it up quite easily," he
said. "Hospitals, for instance, are quite energy intensive -- if you
needed 1.2mW to run a hospital you'd need 100 sunflowers.
Japan is not an obvious place for
this sort of system, but we see a lot of potential there
Gianluca Ambrosetti
Gianluca Ambrosetti
"But if you were in a small
camp hospital with minimal refrigeration requirements for medicines, it could
be set up in a remote location and just one dish could satisfy quite a lot of
those needs."
The system produces around 20kW of
thermal power from 10 hours of sunlight, enough say the developers to power a
low-temperature desalinator in coastal regions. Sea water vapor would pass
through a polymer membrane and condense in a separate chamber, to produce as
much as 2500 liters of fresh water per day.
Vascular system
Ambrosetti said the cooling system
drew its inspiration from nature where vascular systems operate to carry away
excess heat.
"We are still a long way from
commercialization, but what we can do is to tap into its potential. We plan to
set up early adopter projects that would be running by 2016," he said.
"We aim to have four or five dishes in various locations around the world
to show the potential of the system so people can really start to touch it with
their hands."
Ambrosetti said the system was
likely to appeal commercially to green residential and commercial developments.
"It's biggest potential is in
making integrated systems where you can provide several things at once such as
heating, cooling and electricity," he said.
The project also recently got
nominated as the top "solar wonder" of the world by Greenpeace:
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