Simple instead of high-tech: solar technology for the desert

In deserts, the sun is almost always the same – they are ideal locations for solar power plants. However, the harsh conditions in the stemson are increasing by the high-tech installations. That is why the Ticino Company Airtight Energy has set itself the goal of developing a simpler and more favorable construction for solar power plants. For almost two years, she has been operating a pilot plant near Air Baca near the Moroccan port of Acadia. “An ideal place to test the technology and bring it to market maturity,” says project manager Giuseppe Lo Valdo in safety vest.

 

The Ticino pioneers have deliberately opted for a so-called solar thermal plant, because it is particularly suitable for hot sites – better than photovoltaic plants. These gain electrical current from sunlight, but lose their effect dramatically at high temperatures. In addition, the generated current can only be stored poorly.

 

This is different for solar thermal systems, which use energy from the sun’s heat radiation. In the case of so-called parabolic trough power plants, which are already commercially used, this works according to the following principle: Curved mirrors concentrate the solar radiation onto a centrally mounted pipe in which a carrier liquid circulates – for example, oil. This heats up, is passed to a heat exchanger and there brings water to evaporate. The steam drives a turbine. This type of power generation is not only good for use in the warm climate; it also allows storing excess heat for the night.

 

Low-tech and local materials

Such a parabolic trough power station, according to traditional construction, was recently opened in the Moroccan desert town. The Ticino Company Aright Energy uses the same principle in its new plant, but it goes one step further. It has optimized the process and improved the technology with new materials to make them more efficient, cheaper and more sustainable. The three collectors of the Air Baca power station are each 200 meters long and over 10 meters high. They are not made of expensive steel and transported from far away, but have been poured from cement on site. The collectors are covered with a transparent protective film which protects them from sand and dust.

 

The mirrors, which combine solar radiation with conventional solar thermal systems, have been replaced by a reflective heat transfer film in the new pilot plant. This is filled with air so that its pressure and thus its curvature can be regulated. This means that it can always be arranged in such a way that it optimally bundles the incoming solar radiation. The focal point is directed at hoses that connect two tubes positioned one above the other. The air flowing in the hoses is thus heated up to 600 degrees Celsius and rises from the lower to the upper tube.

 

The hot air can be used in two ways: one part flows directly into the furnace of a nearby cement plant. This does not have to be heated with fossil fuels – gas or oil – and emits less climate-damaging greenhouse gases. The remaining part of the hot air operates a turbine and thus generates electricity. If, however, no one is needed, the air is first directed into a heat accumulator. This is also simply constructed: a coarse gravel-filled underground container. There the heat can be stored for up to eight hours.

 

The concept is so impressive that the low-tech solar power station was nominated for the Innovate Prize in London in early February. It did not win, but Aright Energy sees a great future for its technology. By the summer of 2016 the pilot plant in Air Baca will be checked by external company workers in safety clothing. In the case of future tenders for Moroccan solar power plants, Aright Energy intends to be part of the electricity market. The location of Morocco is not only ideal for climatic reasons, as project leader Giuseppe Lo Valdo emphasizes. Thanks to its ambitious solar plan, the country offers a growing market for technology developers.

 

Reflective tape shall be required on school backpack

Nowadays schoolchild choosing a briefcase is not just its color or shape. The other criterion is safety. If Germany has legislated for a long time in this field which requires reflective tape on the briefcase, France is dragging its feet.

Every day in France, a dozen children is a victim of a road accident, injured or killed. In a third of cases, this takes place on foot, on the way to school.

Germany, to avoid such accidents, at least 10% of the back and sides of the binder should be covered with reflective bands and 20% of fluorescent materials.

In France, there is none of that. The Road Safety Association has launched an awareness campaign in the form of a manifesto, “zero children killed on our roads,” including asking using reflective material like reflective heat transfer film on the backpack and satchels younger.

Reflective surfaces allow it to be seen at night, 150 meters. The neon allows to be seen when it rains, it is foggy or it is a bit dark. It increases the ambient light and return to motorists.

Christophe Ramond, director of studies and research of the Association Road safety, also adds that “initiatives” were launched “there thirty years with satchels manufacturers are rigged” but there is no “this safety culture in France as there may be in Germany. It may create a European standard that will promote the commercialization of visible and safe school bags for the children “.

A new model of satchel more secure this year was launched. To try to remedy this lack, the Tennessee brand launches a new model of binder, as described in its manager Frederick: “The trick lies in the fact of having placed security cover in the back very discreet, the child does not have to put the time and when it’s on the way to school, he unfolds it and it comes to cover the entire surface of the binder as a safety vest.”

It is also possible to equip oneself his satchel, all the necessary equipment is cycling radius.