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SkyFuel's Parabolic Troughs Are 73% Efficient

August 31, 2010   |   11 Comments
DOE tests show that SkyFuel's parabolic trough solar concentrator meets the highest standard for efficiency in its class.

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11 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 11
September 1, 2010
This should be applied to the needier nations in the Middle East,India,Western China,Africa.
The technology transfer is made easier when production facilities can be shared with the home countries,like Boeing has done with the Chinese aircraft production.
The machinist training and computing power can be provided along with much else from centers in the US.Royalties can be swapped for market openings for other American exports.
Comment
2 of 11
September 1, 2010
Peru and Chile have the most potential for producing solar collectors in South America. And they need tremendous power for their projects to move water over the Andes to their arable western deserts.
Comment
3 of 11
September 1, 2010
I have a question. It would seem to me - that when setting up a 'farm' of parabolic troughs, you have a complex situation regarding the angle of the sun, and the spacing of the troughs. I am thinking that no matter how you space the rows of troughs - there will only be a short window of time at which there is not wasted energy - due to shadow effect, or light hitting the ground between the rows. On an annual basis - do we have numbers for the overall efficiency of the system? Can we compare this to a pv array system? Thanks. David.
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Comment
4 of 11
Anonymous
September 1, 2010
SkyFuel's large light weight aluminum solar collector using NREL's reflective film is a major advance in CSP technology that will be adopted in all future parabolic trough systems. The days of broken glass mirrors are over.
Comment
5 of 11
September 1, 2010
But what is the range of efficiency of glass mirrors used in CSP trough technology? It would help if you provided a reference point - is the 73% efficiency of SkyTrough high or low?
Comment
6 of 11
September 1, 2010
A white paper describing the tests and showing a graph of the efficiency as a function of fluid temperature is posted here: http://www.skyfuel.com/downloads/SkyTroughEfficiency%28SkyFuel%29.pdf.
Comment
7 of 11
September 1, 2010
While 74% sounds impressive, we really need the energy converted to electricity, not just into heat. For reference the optics on a CSP system is typically about 88% to 92% efficient. Without the total sunlight to electricity measurement, these measurements means little.
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8 of 11
Anonymous
September 3, 2010
Too bad steam steam turbine generators are so "last century".
Comment
9 of 11
September 7, 2010
So, how do you keep them clean?
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10 of 11
Anonymous
September 7, 2010
The 2 above comments are right on. Thanks
Comment
11 of 11
September 11, 2010
To give a meaningful measure of the trough's quality (say in comparison to the existing glass troughs), the geometric concentration ratio (width of trough)/(dia of receiver tube) or preferably (width of trough)/ (circumference of receiver tube) must be also given. This ratio determines the percentage radiative losses from a given receiver at a given temperature. The fact that the new troughs use a larger diameter Schott receiver suggests that their concentration ratio, accuracy and optical performance is inferior to that of glass troughs -- unless they have a much bigger width than glass troughs.

Glass mirrors are of course metal mirrors with glass to protect the reflecting metal from atmospheric degradation (oxidation . . ), and to provide some rigidity. How do the new mirrors' performance after 1, 2 or 3 decades compare to that of glass mirrors (which have been in service on the scale of ~ 354 MWe in the Mojave desert since the 1980's?
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