04 Jun 2009
An engineering student claims to have found a way to store solar energy – the Holy Grail of solar technology.
Claus Volkening, 23, of the University of Portsmouth, has designed and laboratory-tested a solar updraft tower that uses water storage tanks to solve the problem of existing solar power plants which only generate electricity when the sun shines.
Existing solar updraft towers work by collecting heat energy from the sun and sending the warm air up through a tower which houses a turbine. Volkening's model siphons off some of this energy and uses it to heat water – energy which is later released to keep the turbine turning at night.
"I wanted to find a way of generating solar power at night and found that by using water tanks to store the sun's energy through the day, I could smooth out the energy available from a solar power plant," said Volkening.
"Mine is the first working model that has proven this can be done – though more work needs to be done, including an investigation of other materials to be used as storage elements before it could be used as a blueprint for solar updraft tower plants around the world."
The scale model is based on a 1km-high tower surrounded by glass or plastic above water tanks across a 16km square area to re-create a greenhouse effect.
Dr James Buick, who teaches Volkening at Portsmouth, said: "The technology behind solar updraft tower power plants is simple and they can be made from materials available anywhere in the world, which means, unlike other technologies, they are suitable for less-developed countries."
LATEST STORIES ABOUT TECHNOLOGY
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
LATEST JOBS
TODAY'S TOP STORIES
HIGHLIGHT
Model X sports Back to the Future-style "falcon doors" and is set to go on sale in 2014
INSIGHT
INSIGHT
The science and practical application of an improved method for the specification of power and cooling infrastructure for data centres
A look at alternative approaches to managing energy for cost and/or sustainability reasons in data centres
WHAT DO YOU THINK? Add your comment
Solar Combustion Air.
I have a patent on how to convert coal burning power plants to solar and renewable energy. I posted an article (under MORE) at www.solarwashington.org titled Proposal to America. Convert Existing Coal Power Plants to Solar. It can be done, the trick is the economics, more than the technology.
Posted by martin nix, 02 Jan 2010
Solar power storage
This system is clumsy at best. I can think of at least three ways to store massive amounts of energy from solar or wind plants without using batteries. This isn't rocket science folks. Running the entire city of las vegas at night from stored power wouldn't even be a challenge. I don't know why the people who build solar and wind plants don't sent part of their energy into a storage system so the plant can provide electricity around the clock. It's absurdly simple to do. Oh well,I'm not in charge of building these plants but maybe someday the people that are will figure it out. It's so easy a child could do it. Roche F.
Posted by Roche Fahlaneigh, 23 Nov 2009
"Student invents"?!!
There's nothing new about using water to smooth out the output of solar updraft chimnies... I wrote about this in 2006, and it wasn't my idea, either. http://tinyurl.com/ln4qhn
Posted by Tom Konrad, 05 Jun 2009
Let's not over-hype the situation now
I don't know what is worse, the article's description of this being a "holy grail" of solar technology or the student's quote that no-one has successfully used stored solar energy through the night. Molten salt solar thermal plants like California's "Solar II" or Spain's "Solar Tres" have already demonstrated storage of solar energy through the night on a utility scale. Additionally, it has been a few decades since rock-bed storage systems were first proven for domestic solar thermal energy storage over ENTIRE SEASONS! Storing solar is important, and will be key to large scale deployment of solar, but it is not some yet-to-be-found technology or other "holy grail"-like task. There are methods and they simply need to be researched and improved upon. If the student really wants to make an impact, how about he discovers a method for building the massive half-mile tall structures that are needed for updraft solar towers. Nothing like that has been done yet and that is the TRUE bottleneck of his system.
Posted by Dirk Dogerson, 04 Jun 2009