R. Taylor, Yasitha Hewakuruppu, D. DeJarnette, T. Otanicar
{"title":"Fabrication and comparison of selective, transparent optics for concentrating solar systems","authors":"R. Taylor, Yasitha Hewakuruppu, D. DeJarnette, T. Otanicar","doi":"10.1117/12.2185742","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Concentrating optics enable solar thermal energy to be harvested at high temperature (<100oC). As the temperature of the receiver increases, radiative losses can become dominant. In many concentrating systems, the receiver is coated with a selectively absorbing surface (TiNOx, Black Chrome, etc.) to obtain higher efficiency. Commercial absorber coatings are well-developed to be highly absorbing for short (solar) wavelengths, but highly reflective at long (thermal emission) wavelengths. If a solar system requires an analogous transparent, non-absorbing optic – i.e. a cover material which is highly transparent at short wavelengths, but highly reflective at long wavelengths – the technology is simply not available. Low-e glass technology represents a commercially viable option for this sector, but it has only been optimized for visible light transmission. Optically thin metal hole-arrays are another feasible solution, but are often difficult to fabricate. This study investigates combinations of thin film coatings of transparent conductive oxides and nanoparticles as a potential low cost solution for selective solar covers. This paper experimentally compares readily available materials deposited on various substrates and ranks them via an ‘efficiency factor for selectivity’, which represents the efficiency of radiative exchange in a solar collector. Out of the materials studied, indium tin oxide and thin films of ZnS-Ag-ZnS represent the most feasible solutions for concentrated solar systems. Overall, this study provides an engineering design approach and guide for creating scalable, selective, transparent optics which could potentially be imbedded within conventional low-e glass production techniques.","PeriodicalId":142821,"journal":{"name":"SPIE Optics + Photonics for Sustainable Energy","volume":"9559 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2015-09-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"5","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"SPIE Optics + Photonics for Sustainable Energy","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2185742","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 5
Abstract
Concentrating optics enable solar thermal energy to be harvested at high temperature (<100oC). As the temperature of the receiver increases, radiative losses can become dominant. In many concentrating systems, the receiver is coated with a selectively absorbing surface (TiNOx, Black Chrome, etc.) to obtain higher efficiency. Commercial absorber coatings are well-developed to be highly absorbing for short (solar) wavelengths, but highly reflective at long (thermal emission) wavelengths. If a solar system requires an analogous transparent, non-absorbing optic – i.e. a cover material which is highly transparent at short wavelengths, but highly reflective at long wavelengths – the technology is simply not available. Low-e glass technology represents a commercially viable option for this sector, but it has only been optimized for visible light transmission. Optically thin metal hole-arrays are another feasible solution, but are often difficult to fabricate. This study investigates combinations of thin film coatings of transparent conductive oxides and nanoparticles as a potential low cost solution for selective solar covers. This paper experimentally compares readily available materials deposited on various substrates and ranks them via an ‘efficiency factor for selectivity’, which represents the efficiency of radiative exchange in a solar collector. Out of the materials studied, indium tin oxide and thin films of ZnS-Ag-ZnS represent the most feasible solutions for concentrated solar systems. Overall, this study provides an engineering design approach and guide for creating scalable, selective, transparent optics which could potentially be imbedded within conventional low-e glass production techniques.
聚光光学可以在高温(<100℃)下收集太阳能。随着接收器温度的升高,辐射损耗可能成为主导。在许多浓缩系统中,接收器上涂有选择性吸收表面(TiNOx, Black Chrome等)以获得更高的效率。商业吸收涂层已经发展到对短波(太阳)具有高吸收,但对长波(热辐射)具有高反射。如果一个太阳系需要一种类似的透明的、不吸收的光学材料——即一种在短波长高度透明,但在长波长高度反射的覆盖材料——这种技术根本不可用。Low-e玻璃技术代表了该领域商业上可行的选择,但它只针对可见光传输进行了优化。光学薄金属孔阵列是另一种可行的解决方案,但通常难以制造。本研究探讨了透明导电氧化物和纳米颗粒薄膜涂层的组合,作为选择性太阳能罩的潜在低成本解决方案。本文通过实验比较了沉积在各种衬底上的现成材料,并通过“选择性效率因子”(代表太阳能集热器中辐射交换的效率)对它们进行了排名。在所研究的材料中,氧化铟锡和ZnS-Ag-ZnS薄膜代表了聚光太阳能系统最可行的解决方案。总的来说,这项研究提供了一种工程设计方法和指南,用于创建可扩展的、选择性的、透明的光学器件,这些光学器件可能嵌入传统的低电子玻璃生产技术中。