Home > Solar Power > Cool Earth Is Scaling Up Solar Energy Generation
   
   
   
     
       
Thu, 11 Dec 2008 23:01:00

Cool Earth Is Scaling Up Solar Energy Generation

Solar Energy Generation
The idea of inflated concentrators arose quickly from Cummings' determination that only a two-dimensional concentrator of thin film plastic would provide enough concentration of solar rays onto the solar cell.
Marsha W. Johnston



Photo Credit: Cool Earth Solar

Imagine a 1-megawatt solar power plant that has nothing to do with vast swaths of PV panels or mirrored troughs in a barren desert environment that require new transmission lines to population centers. Instead, picture a rolling, grassy field populated with 500 vertical poles that each hold two 8-foot-wide balloons. While cows graze among the poles, the large recyclable plastic balloons, each with a mirrored inside surface, truss and concentrated solar cell, follow the sun's transit thanks to a small electric motor. A utility substation is nearby.

While balloons deployed across the land collecting solar energy is indeed a happy image, CEO Rob Lamkin would argue that the true serendipity of the startup firm's technology has a more important source. "Enough solar hits the earth in an hour to power the world for a year. But flat panel PV installed is US $8 to $9 a watt, whereas our prototype is US $1/watt," he says.

By using cheap, abundant thin film plastic as its primary technology component, Cool Earth has avoided the problem of being able to manufacture the PV required to generate enough solar energy to meet demand and reduce carbon. "The size of the energy problem is in TERA-watts and right now, there are less than 10 gigawatts of PV installed. China puts in that much coal-fired generation in a few weeks," Lamkin says. "We need to ramp solar up to be doing gigawatts, or we are going to lose. A lot of people have figured out that we don't make near enough PV. We would have to install 10 gigawatts of PV every four days until 2030 to get to carbon neutrality."

 

 

The balloon-concentrator cell collector is the brainchild of Dr. Eric Cummings, an award-winning graduate of Caltech and principal investigator at Sandia National Labs. At a 2003 Department of Energy meeting of leading scientists and Nobel Peace Prize winners, Cummings was shocked to realize that even the best scientific minds seemed unable to find solutions to the unprecedented, urgent energy crisis. Most of their solutions were either not economically feasible using current technology or required a scientific leap that simply hadn't yet occurred.

Cummings gave himself a mission to devise a solution to the global energy crisis that incorporated existing technologies or commonly used materials. After tinkering with ideas for months, Cummings decided to reverse his approach: Instead of devising a solar technology and fitting materials into it, he would calculate what materials could scale up enormously and create a technology to fit them. "I realized we couldn't use rare elements. In fact, the materials had to be among the most abundant in nature or industry," he said.

His answer: Plastic thin film was the only material with a great enough supply to solve the energy dilemma head-on. "If you used all of the plastic produced in a year to make just our solar collector balloons, they would generate 3 terawatts of energy, which is the Earth's total demand," Lamkin notes.

The idea of inflated concentrators arose quickly from Cummings' determination that only a two-dimensional concentrator of thin film plastic would provide enough concentration of solar rays onto the solar cell.

By the end of the summer of 2005, having decided he could not manufacture the balloons, Cummings bought a bunch of 18-cent, 18-inch-diameter party balloons. Inflating them to different diameters, he traced their shadows on the wall, and digitized and ran them through mathematical analysis to trace the trajectories of the sun's rays along the inner concavity of the balloons.

At this point, Cummings discovered that bonding a clear and reflective half together at the balloon's equator created a far more efficient concentrator than he had expected. As a final touch, he added a batten (a rigid ring) around the balloon's hemisphere that almost doubled the concentrator's reflecting power and focus.

The plastic PV thin film mirror is Cool Earth's main patent, the breakthrough, says Lamkin. "The plastic thin film makes a perfect curved mirror, which is very expensive to do with other materials," he says. "When optics guys see it, they usually say, `Someone must have already done that! Why didn't I think of it?'"

The first utility-connected Cool Earth project is scheduled to go online during the first half of 2009, a 1.5-MW plant on 12 to 13 acres near Tracy, CA. It is being financed with the firm's US $21 million in Series A financing. The off-taker "probably will be a northern California utility," says Lamkin.

Finding future sites will be easier than for other solar power plants, he says, because, at an installed cost of US $1 per watt and thus lower project ROI, "it doesn't have to have maximum insolation [rate of delivery of solar radiation per unit of horizontal surface]" and the type of site it seeks is typically close to transmission.

One of the downsides to the technology is that the balloons cannot be placed on rooftops because the technology was designed to be utility-scale, not residential.

In addition, a Cool Earth plant must be manned to maintain the active flow of air and water among the balloons to ensure maximum power production and cooling. The circulation of air and water is fully automated, with micro-controllers monitoring individual balloon air pressure and the closed-loop circulation of 1 gallon of water flow per minute. But if a balloon is taking too much air because it has a leak, a signal light will go on, and maintenance personnel must patch it.

"When you add it all up, we will have a lot of O&M [operations and maintenance] items running. For 10 MW, 70 acres, we would expect to have 7 or 8 people working that plant," says Lamkin. He adds that the number of air and water pumps they install has not been determined and will depend on location, such as in the desert, where they might need a shorter water line, or what kind of deals they get on air pumps.

The balloon films are rated to last 5 years outdoors, but Cool Earth says it will replace them every year.

Paul Wormser, director of engineering at Sharp Solar and co-founder of Konarka Technologies who also worked on commercializing solar technologies from University of Massachusetts labs, wonders if the plant O&M could prove to be Cool Earth's undoing.

Acknowledging that he has only read about, not seen or tested, Cool Earth's technology, he said, "even if you have a genuine technological breakthrough, very few startups succeed because they don't have all of the things needed to make it happen. It's not enough to have a high-efficiency cell, new lens, or inflatable collector. You have to be able to deliver kilowatt hours. The reality is that no one will know if they have properly estimated maintenance costs until they've done a few systems."

Wormser also cited a "looming shortage" of the solar concentrator cells Cool Earth collectors use, which Lamkin disputes. "We're not seeing a shortage of solar concentrator cells, and analysts are telling us there will be a surplus in the near term," Lamkin says, adding that Cool Earth is talking to both Emcor and Spectralab, but not making any deals until it completes the development of its special PV receiver.


Source: http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/story?id=54228

5 / 5 (1 Votes)


   
 

           
         
         
         
       
Aseem Kumar
Solar Power Balloons type

Dear Sir,
plz mail me full detail as well as technical & commercial for trade enquiry.
we required balloon type solar system
Thanks
Regards
Sun Technologies
9935410022,9336155671

 
         
       
Your name:
Email (will not be published):
Subject:
Your Comment:


 
           
         

 

         
           
       

In Energy Innovation, Everything New Is...

Most Alternative Fuel Technologies Have...

Automower Solar Hybrid: That's One...

$2,000 price tag may sound steep, the...

The solar-powered school on stilts

The Forest School features up-cycled,...

Solar fee idea zapped

Xcel, for now, has abandoned plan;...

Sunburned: Solar's Dirty Little Secrets

China is dumping hazardous waste from...

Green invention earns notoriety for...

GRADY MAYEAUX, THE inventor of this...

Europe’s Way of Encouraging Solar Power...

Homes with solar panels in Germany,...

Israeli firm develops unique solar...

Researchers develop new technology to...

A Cheaper Solar Concentrator

A new light-guiding optic combines low...

Solar-powered fridge invented by...

Emily Cummins holds the portable...

Japan launches first solar cargo ship

The Toyota Vehicle Distribution Center...

Polymer Solar Cells With Higher...

UCLA solar polymer films and the...

A ray of sunshine for solar energy

A new solar-cell system could one day...

Solar Roofing Materials

Integrating solar cells into building...

Kennewick Company Working On A New Way...

Infinia Corporation’s solar...

FRESNEL TYPE REFLECTOR FOR LATTICE TYPE...

The invention is to prevent reflectors’...

         
           
           

    Notice article's source. Non-commercial publication only. The published articles do not necessary represent FreeEnergy.ca point of view.
     
     

  AddThis Social Bookmark Button      
 

 

 

     
   

 

     
   

Solar Power
Citing Need for Assessments, U.S. Freezes Solar Energy Projects Citing Need for...

Mirrors channel sunlight onto a tube filled with...

     
 

Wind Power
WindTamer brings turbines to campus WindTamer brings...

WindTamer Corp. recently began selling models of...

     
 

Hydro / Ocean
Pure water for Haiti, Afghanistan: Just Add Bacteria Pure water for Haiti,...

Researchers isolated a set of bacterium to do the...

     
   

Thermal Energy
Cool It and Warm It With a Chameleon Roof Cool It and Warm It With...

Cool in Summer Is Good, Cold in Winter Is Not

     
   

Waste
Harnessing waste heat to produce electricity Harnessing waste heat to...

A laptop generating a little too much waste heat

     
           
   

 

     
   

     
   

 

     
           
   

Hamilton: Albertan oil veteran pumping up 'nitrogen grid' Hamilton: Albertan oil...

The underground pipeline would eliminate the need...

NASA sets sights on inflatable space stations NASA sets sights on...

No more floating in a tin can

High-Tech Energy "Oasis" to Bloom in the Desert? High-Tech Energy...

An illustration of the planned Sahara Forest...

Human-caused global warming easily overwhelms much-hyped "cold snap" Human-caused global...

Hottest January in UAH satellite record

Bees Always Have a Safe Landing Bees Always Have a Safe...

Find out why bees never crash land, and how their...

Pentagon Dreams of Flying Car Pentagon Dreams of...

Pentagon's Defense Advanced Research Projects...

Who Needs the Grid? Who Needs the Grid?

A new fuel-cell technology promises to...

Panasonic Plans To Market Storage Battery For Home Use In 2011 Panasonic Plans To...

Home storage battery

50 days to save the world? I might listen to the doomsayers if they weren't such ludicrous hypocrites 50 days to save the...

Prince Charles used the Queen's Flight to travel...

A revolutionary invention hits the streets A revolutionary...

New intelligent bike wheel transforms use

Conspiracy Theory Global Warming with Jesse Ventura Conspiracy Theory Global...

with Jesse Ventura

India's climate change proposals gets nod at Copenhagen summit India's climate change...

India is not here to renegotiate Kyoto agreement.

A Breakthrough for Hydrogen Storage? A Breakthrough for...

Technology from the Soviet space program adapted...

Children's invention to detect forest fires Children's invention to...

A network of solar powered CCTV cameras mounted...

Oyster - the world's largest working hydro-electric wave energy device Oyster - the world's...

The Oyster wave energy device was launched this...

Simpler, cheaper, biodegradable plastic without using fossil fuels Simpler, cheaper,...

Biodegradable cups made from corn at Chubby's...

Mobile Water Purification Offers Hope To Disaster-Hit Regions Mobile Water...

A Safe and Natural Coagulant

Scottish invention promises power revolution Scottish invention...

Dr Markus Mueller, above, of the University of...

CO2 Recycler Creates Fuel From Carbon Dioxide CO2 Recycler Creates...

A prototype of the machine, which was invented by...

Fat in Japan? You're breaking the law. Fat in Japan? You're...

As the health care debate rages in the US, Tokyo...

Energy Saving: Much Cheaper Than Building Power Plants! Energy Saving: Much...

Early in this century we had a nice life based on...

Ridgeblade® Wind Power Generator Wins Dutch Postcode Lottery Green Award Ridgeblade® Wind Power...

Wind Generator is not as simple as it looks

Commack students get $8,100 grant to make energy-saving device Commack students get...

We will invent a device that reduces standby...

Flapping Wind Turbine Inspired by Bumble Bee Wings Flapping Wind Turbine...

The xBEE has a19-foot wingspan and swoops in a...

Betting on a Metal-Air Battery Breakthrough Betting on a Metal-Air...

A government-funded start-up claims it can make...

     
   

 

     
           
           
   

 

     
           
   

Free Energy  Videos

     
   

 

     

 


 

  Site  

      2004-2009 ©  FreeEnergy.ca

  Preview Chanel Preview Chanel   AddThis Feed Button
Powered by: PHPCow.com