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Concentrating Solar System Achieves New Efficiency Record

The following report posted on The Energy Blog was interesting to me first because it explains in simple terms (the ones I need) how a Stirling system works to convert sunlight to electrical power and secondly because it indicates one potentially viable direction that concentrating solar may take.   I firmly believe that in the end we will come to depend on electrical power for virtually every need and it will be generated to a very great degree from sunlight.

Here is is the report:

February 15, 2008

Sandia, Stirling Energy Systems Set New World Record of 31.25% for Solar-to-Grid Conversion Efficiency

Sandia_dish_stirlingOn a perfect New Mexico winter day — with the sky almost 10 percent brighter than usual — Sandia National Laboratories and Stirling Energy Systems (SES) set a new solar-to-grid system conversion efficiency record by achieving a 31.25 percent net efficiency rate. The old 1984 record of 29.4 percent was toppled on SES’s “Serial #3” solar dish Stirling system at Sandia’s National Solar Thermal Test Facility.

The conversion efficiency is calculated by measuring the net energy delivered to the grid and dividing it by the solar energy hitting the dish mirrors. Auxiliary loads, such as water pumps, computers and tracking motors, are accounted for in the net power measurement.

Each dish unit consists of 82 mirrors formed in a dish shape to focus the light to an intense beam onto a receiver, which transmits the heat energy to a Stirling engine. The engine is a sealed system filled with hydrogen. As the gas heats and cools, its pressure rises and falls. The change in pressure drives the pistons inside the engine, producing mechanical power, which in turn drives a generator and makes electricity.

Several technical advancements to the systems led to the record-breaking solar-to-grid conversion efficiency.

The first and probably most important advancement was improved optics. The Stirling dishes are made with a low iron glass with a silver backing that make them highly reflective —focusing as much as 94 percent of the incident sunlight to the engine package, where prior efforts reflected about 91 percent. The mirror facets, patented by Sandia and Paneltec Corp. of Lafayette, Colo., are highly accurate and have minimal imperfections in shape.

Both improvements allow for the loss-control aperture to be reduced to seven inches in diameter — meaning light is highly concentrated as it enters the receiver.

Other advancements to the solar dish-engine system that helped Sandia and SES beat the energy conversion record were a new, more effective radiator that also costs less to build and a new high-efficiency generator.

While all the enhancements led to a better system, one aspect made it happen on a beautiful New Mexico winter day — the weather. The temperature, which hovered around freezing, allowed the cold portion of the engine to operate at about 23 degrees C, and the brightness means more energy was produced while most parasitic loads and losses are constant.

SES is working to commercialize the record-performing system and has signed power purchase agreements with two major Southern California utilities (Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric) for up to 1,750 megawatts (MW) of power, representing the world’s two largest solar power contracts. Collectively, these contracts require up to 70,000 solar dish engine units.

Source: Sandia

More on this topic (What's this?)
Utility Scale Solar Technology Heating Up
Solar Tubes
Read more on Solar Power, Energy at Wikinvest

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2 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Massimo // Feb 15, 2008 at 8:04 am

    nice to see. But SES didn’t made any anouncement about how the think to finance the enormous production- capacity upscaling. They need a lot of Equity, but nothing happend in 2 years…

  • 2 Paul Calhoun // Feb 17, 2008 at 7:16 am

    Jim, Thanks for all the good information

    Environmental Help

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