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Electrical Generation
The generation of electricity
from solar energy can be achieved through two major technology
alternatives. One uses the light from the sun to generate
electricity directly, (photovoltaic technologies), and the other
uses the heat from the sun to increase the temperature of a working
fluid which-in turn can be used to generate electricity, (solar
thermal technologies). Each of these major alternatives can, in
turn, be subdivided into variants of the major technology.
Photovoltaic technologies fall into crystalline, multi-crystalline,
thin-film or concentrator variants while the solar thermal
technologies fall into trough, power tower, dish engine and thermal
electric variants.
Photovoltaics
Generally speaking, photovoltaic
solar cells use a semiconductor material that is exposed to
sunlight. The energy of the incident light displaces electrons from
their normal atomic orbits and an electrode grid structure on the
surface of the semiconductor collects these electrons and makes them
available for use in an external circuit. This is very similar to
the way that the chemical reaction and the electrodes in a dry
battery cell make electrons available for external use.
The terms crystalline, thin film
and concentrator describe the manner in which the semi-conducting
material is processed and optimized as a photovoltaic cell.
Crystalline cells are fabricated from ingots of the semiconductor
material, usually silicon, that are cut into relatively thin slices,
processed to optimize the electron collection efficiency and
laminated into a protective enclosure. Thin film cells are extremely
thin layers of semi-conducting material that are evaporated onto a
substrate, and concentrating cells use a plastic lens to concentrate
sunlight from a large area onto a much smaller area of crystalline
semi-conducting material. All types have their merits and problems
and are described in detail in the referenced locations.
Download the Arizona Consumer's
Guide - this booklet is designed to guide you through the process of
buying a solar electric system. NOTE: You will need Adobe's
Acrobat Reader to open, view, and print this document. Acrobat
is freely available and can be downloaded from Adobe's
Web site. Arizona
Consumer's Guide (PDF Format)
Visit the U.S. Department of
Energy's web site and take the:
Solar-thermal
Both the trough and power tower
solar thermal technologies use mirrors to concentrate the heat from
the sun onto a vessel containing a heat transfer fluid. The fluid is
then pumped into a steam generator where the heat is transferred to
water turn it into steam. The steam can then be used to spin a
conventional steam turbine connected to a generator to make
electricity.
In the case of the trough, the
mirror is a long parabola with a steel tube containing the heat
transfer fluid running along the focal axis of the mirror. The axis
of the mirror is usually aligned in a North-South direction and the
mirror is rotated from East to West as the day progresses so that
the energy from the sun is continually focused onto the steel tube.
Rows of mirror/tube assemblies are used to form large multi-acre
solar fields from which the heated transfer fluid is collected and
used in the generation of steam.
The power tower system is a
little different in that all of the transfer fluid heating is
achieved in a heat receiver on the top of a tower located in the
center of a field of computer controlled mirrors, or heliostats.
Cold fluid is pumped up to the top of the tower, the heliostats
focus the sun's energy onto the receiver and heat the fluid which is
subsequently returned to the ground and used in a steam generator in
the same way as the heat transfer fluid in the trough system.
Dish/engine systems are somewhat
different in that the heat from the sun is used to heat a working
fluid within a heat engine. The rotating shaft of the engine is
connected to a generator, which produces electricity without the
need to go through a steam generation process. The engine is located
at the focal point of a parabolic dish mirror, which is made to
track the sun across the sky throughout the day.
Good Resources:
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