Lecture 15 Solar
Lecture 15 Solar
Lecture 15 Solar
Wind Power - Using the wind to turn propellers connected to turbines. Wind power is considered renewable because the Sun and the Earth's rotation are always generating more winds. Wind power, like hydropower, is really another form of indirect solar power.
The wind power resource of the United States, like its solar power resource, is huge. The dark blue areas in the map below show the areas where "class 6" winds exist. Wind power is presently the fastest growing energy source in the world!
windmills
Passive solar design means that the sun's energy is being used, or controlled, through the physical makeup of the spaces. Active solar design means that some type of mechanical system is collecting, transforming, or moving the energy of the sun in the interior environment.
The Natural Bridges PV System was dedicated in June 1980. Before switching to PV power, the Monument consumed up to 200,000 kilowatt hours of electricity annually. With installation of the PV system and the implementation of energy-efficient measures, the Monument now consumes about 70,000 kWh annually with over 90 percent of that coming from the sun.
The PV shingle shown here won Popular Science Magazine's grand award for What's new in Environmental Technology. The rooftop array of PV roof shingles was developed by United Solar Systems and Energy Conversion Devices under the DOE PV:BONUS program.
The PV shingles installed on this residential-type building replace common roofing shingles. The PV shingles look much like ordinary roofing shingles, but they generate electricity. The PV shingles cover the inner portion of the lower roof section.
They were laid out and nailed to the roof using the same methods as are used to lay conventional shingles. Like their nonPV counterparts, these shingles overlap providing for water shedding capability.
The modules are multi-junction amorphous silicon (a-Si) PV. The a-Si is deposited on a thin, flexible, and lightweight stainless steel substrate and laminated in a polymer. The modules are approximately 0.3 m x 3 m (1 foot x 10 feet).
Building-Integrated panels Outdoor Test Facility at NREL (National Renewable Energy Laboratory), Golden, Colorado
Direct Gain
Solar energy, sun light, strikes the surfaces of the space and warms those surfaces.
While some of the heat is used immediately, walls, floors, ceilings, and furniture store the excess heat, which radiates into the space throughout the day and night. In all cases the performance and comfort of the direct gain space will increase if the thermal mass (concrete, concrete block, brick, or adobe) within the space is increased.
Named after its French inventor, Felix Trombe, the wall is constructed of high density materials--masonry, stone, brick, adobe, or water-filled containers--and is painted a dark color (like black, deep red, brown, purple or green) to more efficiently absorb the solar radiation.
Trombe wall
The solid wall is placed between south facing windows and living spaces. The wall absorbs solar heat through radiation, stores it, and then releases it into the space when
the indoor temperature falls below that of the walls surface.
the location of the sun (relative to us) is described in terms of its altitude, and azimuth
Athens, Ohio is located at: 82 degrees w West longitude 39.5 degrees North latitude
The Tropic of Cancer (23 1/2N) and the Tropic of Capricorn (23 1/2S), mark the farthest points north and south of the equator where the sun's rays fall vertically and the Arctic Circle (66 1/2N) and the Antarctic Circle (66 1/2S), mark the farthest points north and south of the equator where the sun appears above the horizon each day of the year. Inside the Arctic circle, the sun never rises for the winter months.
Active systems involve pumps (for water) or fans (for air) and collect sunlight with flat plate collectors. The flat plate collector is essentially an insulated box that allows sunlight in on one side through a glass covered window and absorb it with dark colored metallic surfaces.
The collected (and trapped) heat is then transferred by conduction into a working fluid (typically water with or without antifreeze, or air), which is continuously pumped through pipes in contact with the collecting surfaces. The working fluid is then routed either to a storage medium, such as a hot water tank, rock bed, or radiant floor, or transferred directly into the air.