Meet the Steel-Melting Solar Mirror

Eric Bland, Discovery News
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"This is just an incredibly simple structure to build," said David Pelly, the team's advisor at MIT. "It's not dependent on silicon or robotics for manufacturing."

Initially, the company plans to focus on boiling water at about 250 degrees Celsius (482 degrees Fahrenheit) to create 'wet steam' for industrial and commercial applications.

Much higher temperatures are feasible; Wood calculates that the solar collector could generate temperatures higher than 1,300 degrees C (2,372 F), hot enough to melt steel.

The group recently set up a demonstration dish on MIT's campus, where they proceeded to vaporize long wood beam.

While focusing light to create high temperatures works easily, turning that heat into energy is less straightforward.

There are three major ways to produce energy from high temperatures, say experts: heating a gas to drive a piston and generate an electrical current (also called a Sterling engine); using steam to drive a turbine; or focusing light onto a small, special photovoltaic cell that can absorb large concentrations of sunlight.

It's the last option that Scott Elrod, a solar concentrator researcher at the Palo Alto Research Center, finds most appealing.

"The potential to reduce costs is so great [using high-concentration photovoltaics] that you can afford to buy more efficient photovoltaic cells, the same cells that are used in space craft," said Elrod.

"What they are doing is very interesting," said Elrod. "I think that solar concentrators are a very powerful approach to capturing sunlight and using it in the most cost effective way."


Related Links:

Eric Bland's blog: Interior Design

Discovery Tech

How Stuff Works: Solar Cells


 
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