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Has anyone tried the 3d solar panel tower?

 
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MIT did some testing on a 3d solar tower that seems to have really great potential.  Has anyone tried building one?

Here is a link to one article about them:  3d solar tower article
 
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If you read the details of the article it does not say that each individual panel it would produce " up to 20 times more power" which is technically impossible but that a stack of panels at various angles would produce that much sitting on the same spot... Each individual panel would be actually much less efficient since it would spend most of its day out of the direct angle of the sun.Never mind the panel cost, racking cost, engineering challenge, heat buildup, etc...  So its technically true as long as you squint and look at it a certain way but not very practical.  Once upon a time we used trackers when panels were expensive they used to accomplish what the paper states was the researches main goal. We stopped using them because the answer ended up being cheaper panel on fixed arrays sometimes angled for morning and night.
Cheers,  David
 
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David Baillie wrote:If you read the details of the article it does not say that each individual panel it would produce " up to 20 times more power" which is technically impossible but that a stack of panels at various angles would produce that much sitting on the same spot... Each individual panel would be actually much less efficient since it would spend most of its day out of the direct angle of the sun.Never mind the panel cost, racking cost, engineering challenge, heat buildup, etc...  So its technically true as long as you squint and look at it a certain way but not very practical.  Once upon a time we used trackers when panels were expensive they used to accomplish what the paper states was the researches main goal. We stopped using them because the answer ended up being cheaper panel on fixed arrays sometimes angled for morning and night.
Cheers,  David



That is exactly right, they don't claim that any panel produces 20 times more power, they claim that the tower itself produces 2 to 20 times more power than a flat panel of the same size.  I've only seen model sized examples of this.  The one I saw used panels that were maybe 5" by 5" on a tower that was built from scrap lumber, mostly 1"x2" approx.  If the results can be believed, the panel cost would be the same.  I would think (and this is a guess) that the heat buildup may be less, since the panels are surrounded by air, rather than lying against a roof.  This wouldn't apply to panels on a rack obviously.  If you are talking about a rack system, materials shouldn't cost appreciably more, although I'm not certain what a full sized solar panel weighs.  Regardless, I thought it was an interesting concept.  I may build a model sized one just as an experiment.

Here is the abstract from an article in Energy and Environmental Science.  I didn't purchase the entire article.

Solar energy generation in three dimensions†
Marco Bernardi,a   Nicola Ferralis,a   Jin H. Wan,b   Rachelle Villalonc  and  Jeffrey C. Grossman

Abstract
We formulate, solve computationally and study experimentally the problem of collecting solar energy in three dimensions. We demonstrate that absorbers and reflectors can be combined in the absence of sun tracking to build three-dimensional photovoltaic (3DPV) structures that can generate measured energy densities (energy per base area, kWh/m2) higher by a factor of 2–20 than stationary flat PV panels for the structures considered here, compared to an increase by a factor of 1.3–1.8 for a flat panel with dual-axis sun tracking. The increased energy density is countered by a larger solar cell area per generated energy for 3DPV compared to flat panels (by a factor of 1.5–4 in our conditions), but accompanied by a vast range of improvements. 3DPV structures can mitigate some of the variability inherent to solar PV as they provide a more even source of solar energy generation at all latitudes: they can double the number of peak power generation hours and dramatically reduce the seasonal, latitude and weather variations of solar energy generation compared to a flat panel design. Self-supporting 3D shapes can create new schemes for PV installation and the increased energy density can facilitate the use of cheaper thin film materials in area-limited applications. Our findings suggest that harnessing solar energy in three dimensions can open new avenues towards Terawatt-scale generation.
 
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Hello .... Company in Portugal  is constructing panel towers ... they do look very sturdy but I think as a home owner I would not go higher than 4 panels ... the taller ones look like they could be a problem in high winds

         https://wioenergy.com/solar-towers.html    

Panel size is hard to judge from the pictures ... I think they are as wide as a car .... I do not know the weight of a panel but I would hope the structure is going to be very sturdy ...

On top of that construction cost you would still need your back up batteries unless you can share your output with the local electric company and perhaps your generation will off set the total cast at the end of the month???  
 
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Syl Far wrote:Hello .... Company in Portugal  is constructing panel towers ... they do look very sturdy but I think as a home owner I would not go higher than 4 panels ... the taller ones look like they could be a problem in high winds

         https://wioenergy.com/solar-towers.html    

Panel size is hard to judge from the pictures ... I think they are as wide as a car .... I do not know the weight of a panel but I would hope the structure is going to be very sturdy ...

On top of that construction cost you would still need your back up batteries unless you can share your output with the local electric company and perhaps your generation will off set the total cast at the end of the month???  



Yes, in most places you are going to need batteries no matter what kind of solar array you have unless you are tied to grid power as well.
 
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Honestly, it looks like a toy.  Here's a pic of my solar array frame, which is adjustable for both azimuth and declination.  It is unpowered, so I go out and position it myself.  Really don't need to do that more than 3-4 times per day.
IMG_0780.JPG
[Thumbnail for IMG_0780.JPG]
 
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This is the issue, "measured energy densities (energy per base area, kWh/m2)"  This only matters if land is the most expensive item involved.   This is a Economic continuation of the issue about trackers mentioned above.  About 15 years ago @$5 a watt 30% more panels became cheaper then a 2 axis tracking mount. Now panels are getting to $.50 watt and mounting panels off axis for early and late day power generation is less cost prohibited.  More panels facing east/west is cheaper than more battery. Vertical panels don't produce as much power but don't need snow removal etc.    Tom
 
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I don't like to click links so I ask over at Pinterest.

Hey, this looks like a neat idea to me:




source


source
 
That's a very big dog. I think I want to go home now and hug this tiny ad:
Heat your home with the twigs that naturally fall of the trees in your yard
http://woodheat.net
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