Solar Options

April 10th, 2010 admin Posted in Environment No Comments »

solar power
Juan Trevino asked:

Two solar power technologies exist, one which is passive and another which is active. The passive system can be the photocell panel or the photovoltaic film that receives the sunlight and generates electricity. The active system is a solar dish that captures sunlight, heats water to produce steam, which in turn powers a turbine produces electricity. The Active system can also heat a gas to move a Stirling Engine which moves a power generator.

The passive system is ready to go and there are a few homes that have already installed the system. This system is totally clean backed by the DOE Solar American Initiative, requires space to position the panels or film, and uses an inverter unit to turn direct current into alternate current homes can use. The Power generating companies have also developed the Net Metering system to buy the electricity from the homes that have generate a surplus on their terms. The new federal tax law (“Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008”) effective January 2009 will provide a 30% of the cost of a solar system back to the home owner that installed it. Some States are also providing large incentives to install solar systems The rest of the payback has to come from the real savings generated over time by the system from the Utility company. This great system is expensive as of today and could require up to 6 years for payback. Photovoltaic film or photocell panels are low efficiency and voltage, and compare badly with the option of buying electricity from the utility company. They are costly either because there are not enough producers, they may be using the correct manufacturing procedures, and or because they are collecting their return on investment from the research in creating the photocells. They could also be purposely costly to protect the current centralized power generators. Currently you require from 15 to 30 photocell panels to generate the 2.5 to 3.0 Kilowatt hours generating capacity.

Walmart has established a pilot plan to install photovoltaic panels in several of their stores. If the system produces a return, they will massively implement it in all their stores, since they have sufficient roof space currently not utilized.

The solar system that uses heat to produce steam and power is mainly for large power generating companies and not for homes. However, the active system based on a Stirling engine to power a generator, applicable for homes is not ready to go. Although all of its components have been developed, no one has yet integrated the solar power generating kit, or a home appliance. This system should be very low cost because it requires: a solar collector or dish, a closed circuit tube filled with gas for the stiriling engine, the 3 KW per hour power generator, and a battery bank, to store electricity if the system is a stand alone system. If the home is currently supplied by a utility company, then the battery bank is not needed and the Net Metering system with the public utility company can be used.

Apparently there is a race to develop the stiriling engine from companies in America, New Zealand, India, Sweden, and other countries. A few companies are receiving funding from investment funds to develop the stiriling engine for this home appliance. However, the race is not required because there will be enough room for all suppliers. Markets are huge. Just in United States alone there are 124 million homes that could use the solar power appliance, plus commercial and industrial sites. These companies will have to lobby, compete and go up against big business interest and big government. Homes, commercial and industrial establishments in every country in the world would be a potential customer for these systems, because they would use a small space to position the solar collector, two tubes going to the solar dish, the power generating box, and the battery bank box. With this solar unit, you could power any site in the desert or the wilderness, and provide them with modern comforts they lack today.

Having the home powering appliance, can be the initial steps for returning to sustainable systems. Today, the sun is there fore light and warmth, free for all of us to use and enjoy. A home solar powered generator would provide clean energy, and allow equal footing to all nations rich and poor, to devote their funding into other worthwhile social services such as health and education. Rich nations which have electrical grids and power generation capacity would suddenly feel there would be no need to continue increasing Power generation capacities and hopefully they would discontinue all those plants that contaminate.

Homemade Energy

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Solar Power Generation

March 2nd, 2010 admin Posted in Environment No Comments »

solar power
Juan Trevino asked:


A home solar dish that activates a Stirling engine and moves a 3 kilowatt/hour power generator would make most electrical power generation and distribution grids, obsolete. This small, apparently insignificant Solar Generator installed at each of the 124 million households in America would deliver the energy that is needed to power up homes for heating, lights, cooking, water heater, TV sets and all the electrical amenities required to provide modern human comfort, now and years to come. A small equipment or appliance could solve a problem of gigantic proportions and would surely provide a more sustainable and new world order.

A series of articles along these topics will explore the solar power generation equipment, the centralized power generation and distribution system, demand for electricity and world growth, international energy agency position, sustainability of the electric industry and more related issues. These articles wish to make a modest contribution toward world sustainability and fairness in energy distribution. Finding investors that can contribute in developing the home solar power generator would be the largest plus for these articles.

Solar Equipment.- The Appliance

Homes in the US require an average of 25 to 35 kilowatts per day, or about one megawatt per month. Average homes need about 12 megawatts per year which may cost about 1,800 USD, every years. On the other hand, a home solar generator with an electrical storage system should cost less than $1,800 for the equipment and free sun power from then on. The solar generator receives about 10 hours of sun light per day, and can produce the temperature change needed to activate a Stirling engine. The Stirling engine in turn would drive a 3 KW hour power generator during sun light hours and deliver a direct current that is stored in a battery bank. Then the battery bank would provide on demand, 24 hour electricity to the home outlet.

Centralized Power Generation

Our current electrical power grids are the product of big business, big lobbyist and big government because they require large investments. An electrical power grid can be integrated using Nuclear, Coal, Gas, hydro power, or thermal turbines, to generate the steam which drives the power generator. The electrical energy is then sent though cables thousands of miles and delivered to homes, offices, and industrial buildings. Consumers need to be tied to electrical grids to have power. Having large number of consumers in a location maintains the electrical delivery systems within cost. This central power generation and distribution system, needs a large institutional infrastructure, including institutions such as the Department of Energy, a Nuclear Commission, an International Energy Agency, agencies to handle clean coal, liquid Natural gas to say the least. This complex power development model established in the past century and current today, increases entry cost to all societies and furthers development and underdevelopment of nations, in favor of countries that created the model and can afford the energy.

Power Plants require either carbon base fuels, uranium, thermal or hydo power as the energy source. Powerful special interests exists for the carbon based fuels, such as coal, natural gas and petroleum, to continue its usage and its proliferation. American foreign policy has been shaped to protects fuel supplies, and inhibit US participation in Green House Gas emission treaties. The centralized power generation model is so strong that it has elevated the initial investment for these plants, and position them at the Billion dollar marks. This situation has further contributed to the need for a World Bank, and an International Monetary Fund, who would fund those countries that need to buy Power Plants.

Freeing homes from electrical power grids implies that any home, anywhere, can power up if they have installed their $1,800 home solar generator, having the same human comfort that city dwellers now enjoy. . Governments or Power Companies would no longer need to invest 5 billion USD per Nuclear reactor to provide 1.5 Gigawatt capacity. Land used for the electrical transmission cable, would be recovered once the electrical power grids were dismantled.

 

 



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