Saturday March 20 , 2010

Salt: Enabling Solar Power After Dark

getsolar.com

Short URL for this article: http://is.gd/8QOSY

You may have heard about the new technology that promises to extend solar power production into previously unknown territory: darkness. The key ingredient is a type of salt that acts as a thermal mass, becoming molten during the heat of the day and then releasing that stored heat at night to provide steam to power turbines for energy production. The New York Times blog Green Inc. offers a good look at the details of the Nevada solar plant being planned around this technology, and a good sum-up of how it will actually work:

Huge fields of mirrors called heliostats focus the sun on the receiver, which heats the salt to 1,050 degrees. The liquefied salt flows through a steam-generating system to drive the turbine and is returned to the receiver to be heated again.

A planned power plant in Nevada projects being able to store up to 12 hours of energy with this method, enabling the utility company purchasing the power (NV Energy) to better distribute this variable renewable resource. A second plant, providing 150 MW of solar power for California’s PG&E, will have 7 hours of storage.

Source


Solarfeeds.com
Like this? Tweet it to your followers!
blog comments powered by Disqus

Contributor Network

SolarFeeds on Facebook

New At Battery Feeds

Upcoming Events

Recent Articles

ROKNEWSPAGER ERROR: File not found: ../ad/glass.jpg
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8

getsolar

GetSolar.com is your go-to place to discover, debate and deliver solutions for the clean economy. Whether you're looking for solar panel installers, green-build architects, global news or grid-free gizmos, you'll find it here, along with unbiased, informative and entertaining articles that may provoke or please but never pander. We believe in the power of information and will continuously strive to improve getsolar.com so that we may finally see clean energy become the norm and not the alternative. We are excited you're here, and your feedback is an essential part of this process - welcome to the conversation.

Articles l Homepage

 

http://www.solarfeeds.com/ad/solarsummit.jpg


Google Analytics Alternative