SOLAR FURNACE WITH “FIVE” CONCAVE MIRRORS AND “VICARIO” CYCLE FOR THE PRODUCTION OF HYDROGEN BY THERMOLYSIS-ARCHITECTONICALLY-ACCOMPLISHED BY THERMODYNAMIC CONVERSION OF SOLAR ENERGY INTO STEAM

Author(s):  
Emilio C.O. Vicario
1999 ◽  
Vol 121 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Ferriere ◽  
C. Faillat ◽  
S. Galasso ◽  
L. Barrallier ◽  
J-E. Masse

A recent French contribution in the field of surface hardening of steel using concentrated solar energy is presented. Single spot and continuous scanning processes have been investigated in a small-scale solar furnace. Hardened regions of 0.5–1.5 mm in thickness have been obtained on specimens of carbon steel, resulting from the transformation hardening process. Compressive stresses are induced in the thermally affected layer, without tensile peak in the bulk.


2019 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 261-270
Author(s):  
Maria Stoicanescu ◽  
Aurel Crisan ◽  
Ioan Milosan ◽  
Mihai Alin Pop ◽  
Jose Rodriguez Garcia ◽  
...  

This paper presents and discusses research conducted with the purpose of developing the use of solar energy in the heat treatment of steels. For this, a vertical axis solar furnace called at Plataforma Solar de Almeria was adapted such as to allow control of the heating and cooling processes of samples made from 1.1730 steel. Thus temperature variation in pre-set points of the heated samples could be monitored in correlation with the working parameters: the level of solar radiation and implicitly the energy used the conditions of sample exposed to solar radiation, and the various protections and cooling mediums.The recorded data allowed establishing the types of treatments applied for certain working conditions. The distribution of hardness, as the representative feature resulting from heat treatment, was analysed on all sides of the treated samples. In correlation with the time-temperature-transformation diagram of 1.1730 steel, the measured values confirmed the possibility of using solar energy in all types of heat treatment applied to this steel. In parallel the efficiency of using solar energy was analysed in comparison to the energy obtained by burning methane gas for the heat treatment for the same set of samples. The analysis considered energy consumption, productivity and the impact on the environment. Thanks to various data obtained through developed experiences, which cover a wide range of thermic treatments applied steels 1.1730 model, we can certainly state that this can be a solid base in using solar energy in applications of thermic treatment at a high industrial level.


Author(s):  
Sylvain Rodat ◽  
Stéphane Abanades ◽  
Gilles Flamant

Solar thermal pyrolysis of natural gas is studied for the co-production of hydrogen, a promising energy carrier, and Carbon Black, a high-value nano-material, with the bonus of zero CO2 emissions. A 10 kW multi-tubular solar reactor (SR10) based on the indirect heating concept was designed, constructed and tested. It is composed of an insulated cubic cavity receiver (20 cm side) that absorbs concentrated solar irradiation through a quartz window by a 9 cm-diameter aperture. The solar concentrating system is the 1 MW solar furnace of CNRS-PROMES laboratory. An argon-methane mixture flows inside four graphite tubular reaction zones each composed of two concentric tubes that are settled vertically inside the cavity. Experimental runs mainly showed the key influence of the residence time and temperature on the reaction extent. Since SR10 design presented a weak recovery of carbon black in the filter, a single tube configuration was tested with an external plasma heating source. Complete methane conversion and hydrogen yield beyond 80% were achieved at 2073K. Hydrogen and carbon mass balances showed that C2H2 intermediates affect drastically the carbon black production yield: about half of the initial carbon content in the CH4 was found as C2H2 in the outlet gas. Nevertheless, the carbon black recovery in the filtering device was improved with this new configuration. Data are extrapolated to predict the possible hydrogen and carbon production for a future 50 kW solar reactor. The expected production was estimated to be about 2.47 Nm3/h H2 and 386 g/h carbon black for 1.47 Nm3/h of CH4 injected.


Materials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 581
Author(s):  
Ioan Milosan ◽  
Monica Florescu ◽  
Daniel Cristea ◽  
Ionelia Voiculescu ◽  
Mihai Alin Pop ◽  
...  

The appropriate selection of implant materials is very important for the long-term success of the implants. A modified composition of AISI 316 stainless steel was treated using solar energy in a vertical axis solar furnace and it was subjected to a hyper-hardening treatment at a 1050 °C austenitizing temperature with a rapid cooling in cold water followed by three variants of tempering (150, 250, and 350 °C). After the heat treatment, the samples were analyzed in terms of hardness, microstructure (performed by scanning electron microscopy), and corrosion resistance. The electrochemical measurements were performed by potentiodynamic and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy in liquids that simulate biological fluids (NaCl 0.9% and Ringer’s solution). Different corrosion behaviors according to the heat treatment type have been observed and a passivation layer has formed on some of the heat-treated samples. The samples, heat-treated by immersion quenching, exhibit a significantly improved pitting corrosion resistance. The subsequent heat treatments, like tempering at 350 °C after quenching, also promote low corrosion rates. The heat treatments performed using solar energy applied on stainless steel can lead to good corrosion behavior and can be recommended as unconventional thermal processing of biocompatible materials.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (20) ◽  
pp. 6902-6909
Author(s):  
Karthika Pichaimuthu ◽  
Anirudha Jena ◽  
Ho Chang ◽  
Chaochin Su ◽  
Ru-Shi Liu

The production of hydrogen using solar energy via a photoelectrochemical system is an effective technique for meeting present clean energy needs.


2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Irina Vishnevetsky ◽  
Michael Epstein ◽  
Tareq Abu-Hamed ◽  
Jacob Karni

Boron hydrolysis reaction can be used for onboard production of hydrogen. Boron is a promising candidate because of its low molecular weight and relatively high valence. The oxide product from this process can be reduced and the boron can be recovered using known technologies, e.g., chemically with magnesium or via electrolysis. In both routes solar energy can play a major role. In the case of magnesium, an intermediate product, magnesium oxide, is formed, and its reduction back to magnesium can exploit solar energy. The boron hydrolysis process at moderate reactor temperature up to 650°C, potentially suitable for use in vehicles, has not been sufficiently studied so far. This paper addresses the operational requirements using an experimental setup for investigating the hydrolysis reaction of metal powders exposed to steam containing atmosphere. The output hydrogen is measured as a function of temperature in reaction zone, steam partial pressure, and the different steam to metal ratio. Test results obtained during the hydrolysis of amorphous boron powder in batch experiments (with 0.1–2g of boron, water mass flow rate of 0.1–1g∕min, carrier gas flow rate of 100cm3∕min at total atmospheric pressure with steam partial pressure of 0.55–0.95bar abs) indicate that the reaction occurs in two different stages, depending on the temperature. A slow reaction starts at about 300°C and hydrogen output increases with reactor temperature and steam partial pressure. The fast stage starts as the reactor temperature approaches 500°C. At this temperature, the reaction develops vigorously due to higher reaction rate and its strong exothermic nature. The fast stage is self-restrained when 50–60% of the loaded boron is reacted and 1.5–1.8 SPT L H2 per 1g of boron is produced. Raising the temperature before the steam flow starts during the preheating period above 500°C increases the hydrogen yield at the fast stage. Then, the reaction continues for a long time at slow rate until the hydrogen release is terminated. The duration of the fast step decreases sharply with the increase of the steam to boron ratio.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (3) ◽  
pp. 20-24

The aim of this work is to obtain bulk textured superconducting ceramics based on glass-crystalline precursors of the Bi1.7Pb0.3Sr2Ca(n-1)CunOy (n=5-9) series. Technologies for obtaining superconducting materials are presented. The advantages of melt methods and “Super Fast Aloys Quenching–T” technology is shown. Compositions, methods of synthesis and study of properties of precursors and ceramics obtained by solar energy are presented. The interrelation of the morphology of glass-crystalline precursors and superconducting ceramics based on them is revealed. It is shown that nano-sized nuclei are the basis on which superconducting phases with Ts = 295-315K are formed as a result of the peritectic reaction. The mechanism of conduction in nanostructured layered ceramics containing higher superconducting phases is proposed. The contribution to the conductivity of low-resistance ceramics is assumed due to the mutual influence of Bi / Pb homologous phases, which represent a “quasi” heterogeneous system by analogy with the mechanism proposed by Rashba for heterophase semiconductors.


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