Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7935093 | Solar Energy | 2018 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The design, fabrication, and on-sun characterization of a solar dish concentrating system for performing the two-step thermochemical redox splitting of H2O and CO2 is presented. It comprises a primary sun-tracking 4.4â¯m-dia. solar dish concentrator coupled to a secondary planar rotating reflector. This optical arrangement enables the operation of two (or more) solar reactors side-by-side for performing both redox reactions simultaneously by alternating the solar input between them while making continuous and uninterrupted use of the incoming concentrated sunlight. On-sun characterization of the complete concentrating system revealed a peak solar concentration ratio of 5010 suns and an average of 2710 suns measured over the 30â¯mm-radius aperture of the solar reactor. A detailed optical analysis elucidates measures to increase the optical efficiency and concentration ratio.
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Authors
Fabian Dähler, Michael Wild, Remo Schäppi, Philipp Haueter, Thomas Cooper, Philipp Good, Carlos Larrea, Max Schmitz, Philipp Furler, Aldo Steinfeld,