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Moderator, Treatment Free Beekeepers group on Facebook.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/treatmentfreebeekeepers/
Steve Zoma wrote:
And there is no danger from an inadvertent fire since the collector is always fixed and pointing at the pipe with the brine running through it.
Moderator, Treatment Free Beekeepers group on Facebook.
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Michael Cox wrote:
Steve Zoma wrote:
And there is no danger from an inadvertent fire since the collector is always fixed and pointing at the pipe with the brine running through it.
This also depends on the lens being aligned to the sun as well. If the light intersects the sun at an angle the focal point will not be located where your pipe is. You'll need active sun tracking I think.
Steve Zoma wrote:I thought quite a bit about this...
I think it would work quite well mostly because it is so simple. No real moving parts, because the salt water brine would just be pumped to static solar collectors that are arranged in the curvature of the suns rotation. As the sun strikes areas of the array, it heats up and then runs via pipe to the floor of the greenhouse where it dispenses heat. As long as the brine was pumped from east to west in the array, as the sun marches across the sky, it would have already dispensed its heat into the floor and thus be cool, then just start picking up heat as it moved towards the west.
We as humans have learned to control heated water so well through HVAC systems that the accuracy is incredible and the cost really cheap. It could also be as simple as a pump, relief valve, and quarter turn ball valve for flow control, or as complex as a plc tied into a variable speed pump, called a metering valve in the HVAC world. None of it is really complicated...
And it should work. You are only taking heat in the array and moving it into the soil or concrete of the greenhouse. It's not rocket science here.
Michael Cox wrote:
Typically what is needed is also not greater maximum temperatures, but temperature smoothing between day and night. Your freznel lens isn't going to do anything at midnight when you have a hard spring frost. Temperature regulation is usually best achieved by adding thermal mass, and a common choice is a trombe wall made from drums containing water.
Douglas Alpenstock wrote:I would love to have a big fresnel lens to play with.
Still, I'm a bit foggy on how that provides an advantage over a standard solar water heater. X amount of radiated heat falls on a square foot of Earth. Concentrating it means the collector can be smaller and run hotter, but the fesnel lens area has to be the same as a standard solar collector. Maybe for a niche application?
Michael Cox wrote:Pumps introduce a single point of failure in a system - if it loses power the flow stops. In most solar heating systems that wouldn't be an issue. In a fresnel lens concentrator, it becomes a bomb. You now need to factor in over-pressure/steam release valves.
I'm all for designing new systems, but I think you need a better reason than "because it's possible" to introduce such a complex (and potentially dangerous!) element.
Can you guarantee that your lens will NEVER catch a rogue bit of sunlight and set fire to the surroundings?
Can you design a "fail-safe" system, so that if the power fails it isn't hazardous?
Can you regulate the temperature sufficiently so that you don't cook your plants?
There are many excellent passive solar designs that would be ideal for this situation. I still struggle to see what possible value this might add over those systems.
aurora sev wrote:If you can increase the day temperatures, you can grow more, and if you can retain that heat at night, same thing. But yes, you dont want your greenhouse at 300degrees
If you ever see one of those old giant square tvs in the trash, stop and pull the giant fresnel lens out.
Simon Foreman wrote:
If you ever see one of those old giant square tvs in the trash, stop and pull the giant fresnel lens out.
Very good advice! (Ditto the strong magnets in old microwaves.)
This isn't really related to Fresnel lenses per se, as you could use a parabolic reflector too, but what I want to try using solar energy to heat water to steam (or just vapor) and then direct that up an insulated pipe or gallery to some elevated height and condense it there. Depending on how long and well insulated the duct is you might need solar heater repeater stations along the way? Anyway, the idea is that you can get the water up without pumps or moving parts. You get most of the heat back out when the water condenses, and then you can run it back down to get hydro power or just store it or dribble it out or whatever.
At my age, Happy Hour is a nap.
Jacob Kelley wrote:Can fresnel lenses be used to melt snow?
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