56
Solar Power It’s coming of age

Solar Power

  • Upload
    briar

  • View
    43

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Solar Power. It’s coming of age. CSP (Concentrated Solar Power). There are two types: Parabolic Troughs and “Power Towers”. Parabolic Troughs. Linear parabolic mirrors focusing light on a tube Very efficient (60%) utilize salt heated to 1000 degrees Insulated storage for salt - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Solar Power

Solar Power

It’s coming of age

Page 2: Solar Power

CSP (Concentrated Solar Power)

There are two types:Parabolic Troughs and

“Power Towers”

Page 3: Solar Power

Parabolic Troughs

• Linear parabolic mirrors focusing light on a tube– Very efficient (60%) utilize salt heated to 1000 degrees– Insulated storage for salt– Then boil water, steam turns turbine, turbine turns generator.

Voila! 24 hour solar electricityalso– Most have a natural gas boiler integrated into loop, so plant

has full production 24 hours/day

Page 4: Solar Power

Parabolic Trough

Page 5: Solar Power

Another way to view a parabolic trough

Page 6: Solar Power

Solar Trough “farms” in the US

Page 7: Solar Power

“Solar One” Parabolic Trough in Nevada64 MW; 400 acres; (15,000 homes)

Page 8: Solar Power

Nevada Solar One Schematic Diagram

Page 9: Solar Power

Abengoa Solar Troughs Gila Bend AZ

280 MW CSP, the largest in the world (70,000 homes supplied—covers 1900 acres), and a second 280 MW plant under construction near Barstow, CA (54,000 homes). On line 2014.

Page 10: Solar Power

Greentech Mediafor the latest in . . .well, greentech

and from National Renewable Energy Lab—Thermal Storage

And the California ISO website shows demand and renewable output.

Page 11: Solar Power

Solar One “Power Tower” in Barstow CaliforniaThe original solar power tower located in Barstow, California, and completed in 1981. The Solar One had a design capacity of 10,000 peak kilowatts, and was composed of a receiver located on the top of a tower surrounded by a field of reflectors. The concentrated sunlight created steam to drive a steam turbine and electric generator located on the ground.

Page 12: Solar Power

PS-10 Power Tower in Spain

• Mirrors focus sunlight onto a small area at top of 300 foot tall tower. – Utilize liquid sodium as a fluid to collect and

transport heat to boil water, steam turns turbine, turbine turns generator.

– Power 65,000 homesIntegral is Sevilla PV, an integrated photovoltaic

array that will power 1800 homes

Page 13: Solar Power

The PS 10, 11MW Heliostat Tower in Spain”

Page 14: Solar Power

Hallelujah!

Page 15: Solar Power

Ivanpah Power Tower—eastern California. First circle is nearing completion. 4000 acres. Towers 500 feet tall. 170,000 heliostats

(mirrors)390 MW Equals 140,000 + homes

Page 16: Solar Power

$50 million to relocate endangered desert tortoises. There are desert ecosystems--no free lunches

Page 17: Solar Power
Page 18: Solar Power

But . . . Let’s not forget Photovoltaic—(Sunlight directly into electricity)

• Western PV panel makers driven out of business by Chinese• But, cheap panels make installation cheaper• Installation companies go crazy• Big investors see good opportunities• Solar City stock rises 200% in 2013

– Solar City model. Install homeowner PV systems for free, then take a portion of output to pay for systems.

PV still less than 1% of US power output, but increased 76% in 2012 bypassing wind for first time.

Page 19: Solar Power

Solnova PV (Spain) in foreground=150 MWbackground PS-10 & PS-20 Power Towers

Page 20: Solar Power

Agua Caliente Solar Project-Mojave Desert California. 290MW

Page 21: Solar Power
Page 22: Solar Power

Geothermal Energy

• Most common utilizes very hot water or steam. “The Geysers” in California.

• About 30 square miles active site.• About 1000 MW continual output.

Page 23: Solar Power
Page 24: Solar Power

Dry Steam and Flash SteamRequires very hot water/steam (The Geysers Model)

Page 25: Solar Power

Enhanced Geothermal Systems:Got Hot Rocks?

• AltaRock Energy Inc. at Newberry Volcano near Bend.• Drill one hole into hot (600 degrees F) dry rock• Fracture rock by injecting cold water• Drill more holes about 1500 feet away• Pump water down original hole and out secondary

holes. Convert to steam and use flash (direct) or heat exchanger/binary systems to drive steam turbine and generate electricity.

• Successful test January 2013.

Page 26: Solar Power

Enhanced Geothermal SystemUtilizing Hot, Dry Bedrock

Page 27: Solar Power

Binary SystemUtilizes a secondary closed loop of low boiling point substance to drive the

turbine (Probable EGS model—low water consumption.

Page 28: Solar Power

U.S. GeothermalNeal Hot Springs—Harney County

Binary System

• Utilizes hot water to boil secondary fluid in a heat exchanger.

• 23 MW Energy (perhaps enough for 26,000 homes)

• $136 million cost

Page 29: Solar Power

Ground/Water Source Heat Pump Home Heating and Cooling

Page 30: Solar Power
Page 31: Solar Power
Page 32: Solar Power

Benefits

• 50% - 70% more efficient than fossil fuel systems

• 25% - 50% less operating cost

Page 33: Solar Power

Drawbacks

• Costs “Several Times” more than other heating/cooling systems

• Not many installers or repair/adjustment companies yet

Page 34: Solar Power

Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC)

• As Near as I can tell there are no operating systems utilizing the temperature differences in the ocean. In theory and in demos it works, but the costs are so high that nobody has yet invested in a commercial scale site.

Page 35: Solar Power

In theory it is simple; in practice it is wildly expensive

Page 36: Solar Power

Water Turbines (like wind turbines but tiny in comparison)

• Water is 784 times more dense than air = 784 times more energy per unit area of moving water.

• Dependable—tide goes in and out on a regular basis. Rivers flow at a dependable rate

• Widespread possibilities.• In reality, still in test mode—production costs still

very speculative.

Page 37: Solar Power

Tidal Turbine

Page 38: Solar Power

Marine Current TurbineWorld’s First Commercial Scale Tidal Turbine (Strangford Lough, N. Ireland)

1.2 MW capability (1000 homes)

Page 39: Solar Power

Alstom Tidal Turbine—Orkney Scotland1 MW in tests (2013)

Page 40: Solar Power

Christian Science Monitor articicle “Tidal turbines: New sparks of hope

for green energy from beneath the waves”

Page 41: Solar Power

Ocean Renewable Power CompanyThis thing sits on the bottom of a river or bay. It’s a

demo and produces 150 kw of electricity as tide goes in and out.

Page 42: Solar Power

Tidal Barrage SystemAdvantage is that this one can function as a “battery” saving impounded water to generate electricity later

Page 43: Solar Power

La Rance Tidal Barrage in France-Built 1966240MW plant 26% efficient = 62 MW output

Page 44: Solar Power

Sihwa Tidal Barrage, Korea, 2011256 KW, so a bit bigger than La Rance

Page 45: Solar Power

Above the Surface

• Lots of Experimenting, no commercial examples yet—at least none that I know of, but here are some of the ideas.

Page 46: Solar Power

Ocean Power Technology; PB150 Powerbuoy Exists. Potential =150 KW; output 36%= 54 KW

.

Page 47: Solar Power

Lots of Ideas

Page 48: Solar Power

Floats ride the waves moving piston up and down inside a magnet to make

electricity

Page 49: Solar Power

Columbia Power “Stingray”OSU developed—makes no sense to me!

Page 50: Solar Power

Pelamis Wave Energy ConverterOR Loch Ness Monster!

750 KW per monster. No commercial “farms” yet

Page 51: Solar Power

Utilizing flowing air to turn turbine

Page 52: Solar Power

“Enernet” or “Cleanweb” or “Soft Grid”

• Definition: Internet-enabled efficiency– A. Digital Lumens Company utilizes LED lights;

motion sensors; ambient light sensors; data; internet technologies. Reduce energy consumption by 90% or more.

Page 53: Solar Power

“Enernet” or “Cleanweb” or “Soft Grid”

• Definition: Internet-enabled efficiency– A. Digital Lumens Company utilizes LED lights; motion sensors;

ambient light sensors; data; internet technologies. Reduce energy consumption by 90% or more.

– B. Opower Company provides digital consumption alerts via smart phones, iPad apps, smart thermostats to make consumers aware of their energy use but also their neighbor’s use (anonymously). 85 unilities, 27 countries, 18 million homes.

Page 54: Solar Power

“Enernet” or “Cleanweb” or “Soft Grid”

• Definition: Internet-enabled efficiency– A. Digital Lumens Company utilizes LED lights; motion sensors;

ambient light sensors; data; internet technologies. Reduce energy consumption by 90% or more.

– B. Opower Company provides digital consumption alerts via smart phones, iPad apps, smart thermostats to make consumers aware of their energy use but also their neighbor’s use (anonymously). 85 unilities, 27 countries, 18 million homes.

– C. EnerNOC Company works with 14,000 customers in five states. When a utility nears capacity, contacts customers, who then reduce consumption for a fee. Can curtail 30-35%

Page 55: Solar Power

“Enernet” or “Cleanweb” or “Soft Grid”

• Definition: Internet-enabled efficiency– C. EnerNOC Company works with 14,000 customers in five states.

When a utility nears capacity, contacts customers, who then reduce consumption for a fee. Can curtail 30-35%

– D. Nest Labs Company sells thermostats that “learn” a house energy needs, and begins to set itself. “At its core it is a smart phone on your wall.” It is internet connected, so can be controlled remotely. It also allows devices in home to communicate with each other via internet—like CO2 detector “talking” with furnace.

Page 56: Solar Power

Google!!!!!

• And Google is buying ‘em all. It is a great data collection resource, then that data can be used for . . . . .