Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Gizmo. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Gizmo. Mostrar todas as mensagens

terça-feira, 26 de fevereiro de 2013

V3Solar puts a new spin on PV efficiency

Um novo conceito bastante interessante para o aproveitamento de energia fotovoltaica, tendo também sido relatado na imprensa nacional (link).

Retirado da revista Gizmag:

"For the vast majority of those looking to harvest energy from the sun to satisfy domestic or business electricity needs, the photovoltaic world is a static and flat one. Even many large scale solar farms feature row upon row of rigid panels, although there may at least be some movement as the panels follow the path of the sun as it moves across the sky. V3Solar's Spin Cell is a little different. It's claimed to be capable of generating over 20 times more electricity than a flat panel with the same area of PV cells thanks to a combination of concentrating lenses, dynamic spin, conical shape, and advanced electronics.

sexta-feira, 8 de fevereiro de 2013

Tiny Rooftop Turbine Could Make Urban Wind Farms A Reality


There's a reason that wind farms are placed offshore rather than in urban areas—the turbines are typically huge, difficult to erect, and need a solid sustained gust to produce any meaningful amount of current. This prototype, on the other hand, will assemble easily and take up little space as it quietly produces kilowatts atop skyscrapers.

Conventional wind farms need wind that is both steady and strong but with very little turbulence. Their turbines are mounted atop 300-foot pylons to avoid the roiling currents at ground level and employ enormous blades to drive their MW generators. Everything operates on a grand scale with these farms, but they're impractical in an urban environment.

Yet cities can be so windy—tightly-packed buildings funnel and redirect natural air currents, resulting in irregular, gusty winds. That's exactly what conventional turbines can't handle. What's more, finding the real estate to safely install a 300-foot tall turbine in the middle of, say, New York City, is impossible. So a new vertical-axis turbine, the McCamley MT01 Mk2, is a designed specifically these dense urban areas.

McCamley MT01 Mk2 - An introduction (Youtube)