The present invention relates to the structural improvement of a concentrating parabolic trough collector through the use of non-conventional core materials that enable the reduction in metal frame structures, weight, and fasteners and that may increase the collector's durability and integrity.
Solar energy is an environmentally friendly source of renewable and sustainable energy that does not necessarily rely on the use of fossil fuels and reduces the release of green house gases that are attributed to global warming and related environmental problems. In many cases, solar energy can be captured and used locally, thereby reducing requirements for transportation or importation of fuels such as petroleum. Concentrating solar power (CSP) systems are one of several technologies that may be used to harness solar energy form the sun.
Solar heaters, such as concentrating troughs, focus sunlight from mirrors and/or lenses onto a central receiver which can be a tube through which a heat transfer fluid flows. The trough collector may be positioned to track the sun so the reflected solar energy is concentrated onto the tube. The heated tube warms the fluid, and high quality heat from the heated fluid can be used to generate electricity, create air conditioning, drinking water from sea water or as steam. Trough solar energy collectors have been designed and manufactured to numerous specifications. The Micro Concentrated Solar Power (MicroCSP™) collectors, for instance, may provide a modular and scalable approach to solar technology suitable for electricity generation, process heat or other energy use.
Various MicroCSP™ collectors have been described in the prior patent applications referenced above. Provided herein is a frame assembly that may be used to construct solar energy collection and conversion systems using a suitable rigid material such as expanded polystyrene or extruded polystyrene, polyurethane, fiberglass, or recyclable materials for example, to support the reflective surface. Preferably, a foam material such as expanded polystyrene or extruded polystyrene may be used as the support surface in lieu of ribs or complex metal frames previously described in patent applications incorporated by reference above, may provide increased solar energy collection efficiency, reduced manufacturing costs, lighter in weight, provides for easy assembly, prolonged life, improved durability, larger or smaller collector apertures, and a modular structure suitable for ground, rooftop or trellis application.
Also provided herein is a method of achieving the desired panel shape by hot wire cutting the foam material with a CNC machine, a laser cutting machine or other device, or by molding or extruding the foam like material into the parabolic form. The collectors are formed into partial parabolic shapes whereby two or more pieces are used to form a complete parabolic trough collector. This design allows for efficient nesting of the pieces thereby minimizing shipping costs and reducing manufacturing costs. Once the panel is cut or molded to shape, a reflective element may then be applied. The reflective elements may also be applied to the foam material prior or during the creation of the parabolic form.
Further, provided herein are various methods of applying the reflective element to the panel, which may include attachment, adhesion or integration with the surface. Once applied to the formed foam material, the reflective element may be reinforced with cowlings or other fastening devices on each side of the parabola piece(s) in order to provide rigidity, reflective stability and to hold the reflector in place. End caps or other fastening components may also be applied at each end of the panel to further lock the reflective element in place, to provide additional structural strength to the panel design, and to provide a point of attachment for the arm, tracking system or for cosmetic treatment.
In addition to the foam material being formed into an appropriate shape giving the collector its parabolic functional characteristics, a method of maintaining the reflector's parabolic shape with the formed foam material may include the use of embedded inserts to secure the end caps and cowlings. An interconnect piece may be used to tie the parabolic shapes together and provide a support for a stanchion to hold the receiver tube and glass envelope in position. A method of connecting multiple panel rows together may comprise using connectors to tie the panels together. The connecting piece may serve to improve multiple collector row strength, may be decorative, and may be used for torsion control.
Thus, in one instance, disclosed is a trough solar energy collector having a rotational axis comprising
Also disclosed is an end arm in assembled or disassembled form comprising
In addition, disclosed is a method comprising
simultaneously slicing a plurality of arcuate reflector cores from a polymer blank,
placing reflective surfaces on concave portions of the arcuate reflector cores,
affixing cowling along edges of the arcuate reflector cores to form arc-shaped reflectors.
Further, disclosed is a method comprising
These and other aspects of the inventions are discussed further below in the text as well as the claims, which are hereby incorporated by reference into the text herein.
Various aspects of the inventions disclosed herein may be understood better by reference to the following discussion in conjunction with the figures, which form a part of this specification and are incorporated by reference. The discussion of particular examples does not limit the scope of the invention, and the discussion is provided only to aid in understanding various aspects of the inventions disclosed herein. The claims are to be afforded a broad interpretation consistent with the principles, as well as the general and specific description herein.
By way of introduction to various parts and combinations of parts,
1. Core
A core may be a polymer, a polymeric foam material, or a honeycomb material such as a composite honeycomb sheet (e.g. aluminum honeycomb core with rigid sheets sandwiching the honeycomb and/or rigid polymer filling the interstices). A core is preferably rigid, so that a concave arcuate surface on the core may have a reflective surface applied that conforms in shape to that of the concave arcuate surface.
The concave arcuate surface may be parabolic, cylindrical, or other concave arc on one side of the core. The opposite side of the core may be of convex curvature that is a mirror image of the curvature of a second core, as explained later. The opposite side may therefore be of convex curvature or may have no curvature.
A core that is flexible may be used if it retains accurate concave curvature when other pieces such as cowling, end caps, reflective element, backing, and/or end arms are applied.
(i) Polymeric Core
A core may be a polymer such as a rigid or semi-rigid polymer. The core may be solid or a foam that has cells (either open or closed). Preferably, a closed cell foam material is used because of its moisture resistant characteristics. The polymer may have sufficient rigidity and surface strength such that the curved surface deforms little when a reflective material is applied to the surface. The core's curved surface therefore accurately imparts its curvature to an applied material.
As shown in
Foam is inexpensive to manufacture and may be locally produced, shaped, and modified. Using foam may reduce the number of parts required because tooling is not required to achieve the collector shape. The foam allows for single piece manufacturing (e.g. a core may be formed as a single piece in a mold or cut from a block of foam) and is easy to handle, thereby reducing assembly time and easing field assembly. The foam material 201, 2601 is also lightweight while maintaining sufficient strength to bear wind loads, significant advantages for roof-mount applications. The formed foam material may easily be shaped and sized to various apertures. For instance, a wider aperture increases the amount of reflective surface per panel, thereby allowing higher temperatures to be reached and therefore providing greater power conversion efficiencies.
In addition, the foam core 201, 2601 may provide a better substrate for the reflective element 601 (
Any core may have other materials applied to it or incorporated into it, such as moisture barrier layer or layers, adhesive, UV blocker or absorbent, and strengthening layer or layers. Thus, various protective layers of material may be applied to any or all surfaces of the core (e.g. convex and/or concave arcuate surfaces), or anchors may be incorporated into a core, for instance.
(i) Honeycomb Core
As mentioned, a honeycomb core may be e.g. an aluminum honeycomb sheet. The sheet may be made rigid by applying rigid or semi-rigid layers to one or more surfaces of the core or by solidifying a material such as a polymer in the interstices of the honeycomb. These layers may include any of the rigid or semi-rigid polymers such as polycarbonate, polyurethane, and polystyrene.
Any core will have a concave arcuate surface on which a reflective layer is placed and optionally a convex arcuate surface as well on which a backing material or materials may be placed.
2. Method to Achieve the Desired Collector Panel Shape
As shown in
Use of a CNC hot wire 301 cutting machine to cut the foam material 201 may reduce overall tooling costs as compared to the tooling costs of stamping out ribs, described in prior patent applications incorporated by reference above. The collectors may be shaped to form parabolically shaped wings 501 (
A bottom or convex face of a core may be identical in curvature to a top or concave face of another core if desired, especially if the cores are both sliced simultaneously from the same polymer blank.
It is thought that a polymeric core may be uniform in tension and compression throughout the polymer of the core, especially where the core or multiple cores are formed by slicing a foam blank (such as a block) into the desired shape without further heating and bending of the bulk foam material. While a core may also be made by extruding the foam or by molding it, it is theorized that heating and bending foam that has already polymerized introduces compression and tension into the foam (especially into closed-cell foam), as may polymerizing a polymer in an arcuately-shaped mold.
Further, slicing a foam blank provides cores than are “skinless” as compared to a core that is formed in a mold. A core cut from a polymeric blank has little to no skin. Any skin formed by slicing a foam blank using hot wires or laser cutting is typically quite thin and/or discontinuous and is believed to be thinner overall than skin formed during polymerization in a mold. A core formed in a mold typically has a skin with physical properties much different from the bulk foam beneath the skin. When a core is sliced from a foam blank, the surface of the core is very much like the bulk foam beneath the surface. The core sliced from a blank is therefore expected to be more uniform than a core formed in a mold. Methods of slicing a core from a blank therefore provide a skinless core as distinguished from a polymeric core formed in a mold.
Further, a foam core sliced from a blank may have already been formed at a higher temperature than foam formed in a mold. Foam typically has low thermal conductivity, and it is anticipated that a large blank of foam during polymerization experiences a higher temperature within much of the foam because of the large size of the blank and/or a high temperature for a much greater period of time than does a core formed in a mold. The much smaller quantity of foam in a mold for a core can cool more quickly, providing a lower temperature at which polymerization occurs in most or all of the foam and/or a much faster cool-down time. It is therefore believed that a foam core sliced from a blank will have already been subjected to a higher temperature and/or a higher temperature for a longer period of time than a molded core experiences, a sort of “pretreatment” of the foam that may lead to longer service life for a core formed from a polymer blank.
3. Outer Coating
As shown in
4. Arc-Shaped Reflector (Wing)
As shown in
The wings 501, 2802 may also be independently rotated so they may close in upon each other in a clamshell like configuration 504 which allows for the protection or storage of the collector. Specifically, the wings may be attached pivotably to allow each wing to pivot and rotate on top of the other 504. This protects the inside of the panel and reduces the wind load profile. The wing is driven by a sprocket assembly that when reaching a certain point, engages the second half of the panel and drives it synchronously. The wings, also or instead may be decorative.
5. Reflective Panels
As shown in
One or more flat but flexible reflective panels 601, 2602 may be retained onto the formed foam surface 602, 2603 mechanically through the use of cowlings 702 (
6. Top and Bottom Longitudinal Cowlings
As shown in FIGS. 7 and 28-30, the formed foam material 701 and the reflective element 2807 may be mechanically held together using reinforcing cowlings 702, 2805 on each longitudinal edge of the parabola pieces. The cowlings 702, 2805 mechanically hold the reflective element in place and provide rigidity. The end caps 703, 2804 discussed in further detail below, may also serve to mechanically hold down the reflective element to the core 701.
The top and bottom cowlings 702, 2805 may be made of aluminum (polished or unpolished) or other metal such as stainless steel that has high rigidity or a plastic. The cowlings 702, 2805 may be applied by positioning inserts 704 or 3101 or 3201 of
The top and bottom cowlings 702, 2805 may also accommodate a variety of thicknesses of the combination of core, reflective element, and/or backing through the use of laterally opposed interlocking notches 706 to provide a cowling with variable opening size. This assembly 705 allows for the adjustability of the opening of the cowling assembly to accommodate varying thicknesses of the combination of the formed foam material, outer coating, and the reflective element. The adjustability of the opening may also accommodate the need to add, change, or remove the reflective material. This cowling assembly 705 also serves to lock the adjusted width in place because the cowlings legs rotate in towards the center as the width is adjusted, thereby providing increased holding pressure on the combination of the formed foam material, outer coating, and the reflective element. This may provide a significantly stronger and more secure attachment of the reflective material. Lastly, the top and bottom cowlings 702 are secured longitudinally with inserts 704 through the center to engage the edge of the panels and force the reflective material to form and maintain a parabolic shape.
The cowlings may be made of flat sheet stock that is bent into a shape to conform with the longitudinal edges of the core, or the cowlings may be rigid channels or conformal material that, alone or together with the core material, provide rigidity to the arc-shaped reflector formed from the core, reflector material, longitudinal cowlings, and optional end caps. The cowlings may themselves be polymeric (e.g. polycarbonate, solid rigid polystyrene), metallic (e.g. aluminum, stainless steel, or other material), ceramic, or other material that aids in protecting the core as well as providing additional rigidity.
7. Transverse End Caps
As shown in
The end caps 801, 2804 may be a single piece of metal stamped, or otherwise cut, from a sheet and having a surface that has a shape which is generally parabolic or substantially arc-shaped to fit the profile of the formed foam material and provide a structural frame. The end caps 801, 2804 preferably may have a tab such as an outer perimeter tab to encase the edge of the formed foam material and to allow for points of attachment. The tab may therefore be configured to overlap the reflector and/or cowling, and the tab may be configured to allow the core to insert within the tabbed portion of the end cap so that the assembled pieces may be secured. The tab may protect the edge of the panel, hold the reflective element in place, add a dimension to the end cap 801, 2804 for rigidity, and provide a finished look to the support structure.
One or more ribs may be used in place of or in addition to end caps. Ribs attach directly to the end arms and form arc-shaped members that make the end-arm a more rigid structure independently of whether reflector panels or wings are attached to the core and end-arms. A rib is therefore separate from a reflector panel or wing and end cap as discussed above.
8. End Arms
End arms help to support Mirrored panels and transmit movement induced by a motor to the panels to track the sun's apparent movement. An end arm may be configured in a number of ways.
As shown in
An end arm 505 as illustrated in
An end arm 901 may be formed from individual fittings such as welded, die cast, or molded fittings that are formed to accept tubing, rods, or other fitting couplers and attach to the wings. As depicted in
A bottom fitting 3302 may have a collar or shape 3308 that engages another depression or opening 3309 of the same or an adjacent panel. A bottom fitting may be formed in one piece as shown so that the piece engages both of the reflective panels of adjacent panels to form a larger arc from the two panels. A bottom fitting may instead be formed in two or more pieces that are secured to one another. A bottom fitting may have one or more collar portions 3313 that overlie an edge of the reflective layer or element and/or the cowling 3314 as well as the core. The collar portion 3313 may also or instead overlap a backing material 3315 applied to the core. The bottom fitting may also have holes that allow e.g. a bolt or screw to engage with a fastener or anchor in the core. A bottom fitting may also have one or a plurality of holes 3316 that receive fitting couplers 3317 that engage with the hub fitting.
An end fitting 3303 may have a collar or shape 3306 that engages a recess or opening 3307 in the arcuate reflector panel 3305. Screws or bolts may be inserted through holes 3310, 3311 in the end and bottom fittings to secure an arc-shaped reflector to fittings in the core by screwing into anchors in the foam or honeycomb beneath the optional end-caps. An end fitting may have one or more collar portions 3318 that overlie an edge of the reflective layer and/or the cowling as well as the core. The collar portion may also or instead overlap a backing material applied to the core. An end fitting may also have one or a plurality of holes 3319 that receive fitting couplers 3320 that engage with the hub fitting. An end fitting may also optionally have a flat rectangularly-shaped surface 3322 along an edge of the end-fitting so that e.g. a flat bar 2901 (
A hub fitting 3304 may have the locator tube collar mentioned previously, an end of which is depicted as 3312 in
Couplers 3317 and 3320 may run radially from the hub fitting 3304 on a locator tube collar and to the end 3303 and bottom 3302 fittings, thereby forming generally two “L” shapes or a “Y” shape. Various lengths of couplers may be used to adjust the shape and length of the end arm 901, 3301 to allow forming collectors of varying aperture widths mentioned earlier. The fittings may be rods such as solid or tubular metal rods (e.g. aluminum), and the rods may be e.g. cylindrical, square, rectangular, regular, or irregular in cross-section.
The fittings and/or couplers may be formed of polymer (such as a rigid non-foamed polymer as discussed herein), metal such as aluminum, ceramic, or other suitable material.
9. Corner End Panel Interconnect
As shown in
The corner element 1001 may bridge one panel to another to maintain alignment and transfer torque to the next row of collectors. Potentially, multiple corner end panel interconnect 1001 pieces may be used to tie the bottom cowlings together to form an I-beam type structural member. This member may also be a one piece extruded shape.
An interconnect may also be a section of flat bar 2901 (
10. Inserts/Anchors
As shown in
An insert may be glued into foam or other polymer of a core, as shown in
11. Fastener (e.g. Clip)
As shown in the figures, a clip (502 (
A clip 502, 1201,2803 may also optionally have a provision for attaching a stanchion 1401, 2808 to support the receiver tube 1301 and glass envelope 2001. The stanchion 1401, 2808 may be positioned on top of the H-clip 1201 in the center of collector. This allows the stanchion 1401 to remain stationary and ensures the receiver tube 1301 is always centered at the focal point of the collector.
A clip as used in the collector depicted in
The fastener need not be a clip. For instance, the fastener may be a screw that joins flat tabs from adjoining cowling together or a latch and receiving portion on adjacent panels, for instance.
A clip may span some or all of the distance from one end cap to the other end cap. Since a clip need only provide an attachment point to improve rigidity of the assembly, a clip may be relatively short, being less than about 1/10 of the length of the cowling with which it engages. If further rigidity is desired, the clip can be made longer. The clip may be positioned at a midpoint along the longitudinally extending cowling for instance, or multiple clips may be positioned approximately equidistantly along the longitudinally extending cowling.
12. Longitudinal Collector Tube
As shown in
The collector or receiver tube 1301, 2801 may have a working fluid, preferably an oil, Freon or water, working through the interior of the pipe. The receiver tube 1301 may connect to a joint or pass through a locator tube collar 2301 (
13. Stanchion
As shown in
Collector tube height can be adjusted by moving the plate 3506 on which the bearing rests up or down and then tightening the bearing attachment 3503 to secure the collector tube 3507 and bearing 3502 in place. An additional cap (not shown for sake of clarity) engages with bolt-holes 3508 onto the stanchion to retain an insulating glass envelope (discussed below).
14. U-Bolt Assembly
As shown in
15. Receiver Bearing Adjustment Screw
As shown in
16. Receiver Tube Bearing Attachment
As shown in
17. Stanchion Bracket
As shown in
18. Gaskets
As shown in
The seal created contains the ambient atmosphere within the chamber of the glass envelope 2001 when a cover, described below, is placed on or in the opening of the glass envelope 2001 housing. The silicone end seals 1901 may be pliable and movable to allow thermal expansion without undue stress being created on the ends of the glass envelope 2001 or the receiver tube 1301.
19. Glass Envelope
As shown in
Additionally, the glass envelope 2001 may be sliced to shape leaving at least one opening to allow easy access to the chamber, so the envelope 2001 may be placed over the receiver tube 1301 without having to slide it on and risk breakage. This opening allows for convenient and easy installation, assembly, replacement, and cleaning. The one or more openings may run the entire length of the glass envelope 2001 and may be as wide as or wider than the receiver tube 1301 that is to reside within the chamber of the envelope 2001. Once placed over the receiver tube 1301, the glass envelope 2001 opening may be filled with an inner and outer reflective cover 2101 described below, and an insulating material 2102, all of which are sealed by the silicone foam gaskets 1901.
A glass envelope may be a telescoping envelope as illustrated in
20. Inner and Outer Reflective Cover
As shown in
The inner and outer covers 2101 are often movable and may fit within or upon the one or more openings of the glass envelope 2001. The inner and outer covers 2101 may be made of any suitable rigid material, preferably aluminum (polished or unpolished), may be formed of a metal such as stainless steel that has high rigidity, or may be silvered to make a reflective surface. The outer cover 2104 may provide a protective backing for the glass envelope 2001. The inner cover 2103 acts as a lens to better direct solar radiation onto the receiver tube 1301. The inner cover 2103 focuses solar energy upon the receiver tube 1301 when it is seated in the glass envelope 2001 and reflects any solar radiation that is not reflected directly onto the receiver tube 1301. The inner cover's 2103 surface may reflect at least 50% of the radiation incident upon it, and preferably the surface reflects greater than 80% or 90% of the radiation incident upon it. Inserted in between the inner and outer cover 2101 is a thermally insulating material 2102 able to withstand high temperatures, preferably a rigid polymer like polycarbonate, polyamide, or polyimide that may have a mirrored coating to reflect light. The insulating material 2102 and the inner and outer covers 2101 may be clamped together by a bolt, screw, rivet, or any other suitable fastener.
21. Locator Tube
As shown in
The locator tube 2201 and locator tube collar 2301 may each have holes through which bolts or adjusting screws, for example, extend. The bolts or screws secure the locator tube collar 2301 and locator tube 2201 so that they rotate in unison. Additionally, the bolts or screws may extend through the holes to support the receiver tube 1301 and the locator tube may be used as a race for the bearing to allow the receiver tube 1301 to pass through.
22. Stand
As shown in
23. Torsion Cables
As shown in
This application claims the benefit of priority to U.S. App. Ser. No. 61/274,046 filed Aug. 11, 2009 and entitled “Solid Core Structure Parabolic Trough Solar Energy Collection System,” inventors Kip H. Dopp and Darren T. Kimura, which application is incorporated by reference in its entirety. This application also incorporates by reference the following patent applications, some of which are referred to elsewhere in the text, in their entirety as if put forth in full below: U.S. application Ser. No. 11/811,329 (filed Jun. 8, 2007) “Mirror Assemblies for Concentrating Solar Energy”; U.S. application Ser. No. 11/811,109 (filed Jun. 8, 2007) “Use of Brackets and Rails in Concentrating Solar Energy Collectors”; U.S. application Ser. No. 11/811,027 (filed Jun. 8, 2007) “Protecting Solar Energy Collectors from Inclement Weather”; U.S. application Ser. No. 11/811,073 (filed Jun. 8, 2007) “Use of Identical Components in Solar Energy Collectors”; U.S. application Ser. No. 11/811,153 (filed Jun. 8, 2007) “Support of Heat Collectors in Solar Energy Collectors”; PCT App. No. PCT/US2007/013618 (filed Jun. 8, 2007) “Apparatus and Methods for Concentrating Solar Power”; PCT App. No. PCT/US2009/041171 (filed Apr. 20, 2009) “Parabolic Trough Solar Energy Collection System”; PCT App. No. PCT/US2008/007115 (filed Jun. 6, 2008) “Parking Solar Energy Collectors”; and the PCT Application filed concurrently with this application on Aug. 11, 2010 and entitled “Solid Core Structure Parabolic Trough Solar Energy Collection System,” inventors Kip H. Dopp and Darren T. Kimura.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61274046 | Aug 2009 | US |