Heliostat
A heliostat is a mirror that tracks the sun and continuously reflects sunlight onto a fixed target. Heliostats are often controlled by electric motors which constantly move the mirror to compensate for the movement of the sun during the day and year. These movements may be calculated by a computer. Alternatively, a photosensor may be used to find the current position of the sun. Large solar thermal power plants sometimes consist of an array of heliostats that focus sunlight onto a central tower.
Heliostats by Leo Gerst at Heliostat.us
Leo Gerst (link: Heliostat.us) has built heliostat prototypes that cost $130 per square meter total for a 2-axis tracking heliostat - using off-shelf parts. This is a breakthrough price achievement, and indicates potential economic feasibility of concentrator solar thermal power using heliostats on a small scale. For example, 30 such mirrors, at $4k - at 30 kW of energy focused on a square meter - could realistically power a heat engine. The detailed price list is:
Download the Excel spreadsheet for some sourcing links here.
Conversation of Leo Gerst with Marcin
- See heliostat prototypes from Leo (leogerst at hotmail dot com): http://www.heliostat.us/howitworks.htm
- Within 150 feet, 2.5 feet up and 6 foot wide.
- Home Depot mirror - 36x32" mirror - ended up being 5' wide for an image 115 feet - left to right was 4 feet, 1 foot high image, $40 at Home Depot
- Flat mirror is less expensive
- Motors for 8 dollars, so $16 per mirror. PIC, $12 - bootloader on processor, $3 for PIC itself, but $12 with program
- $1.20 for all-thread
- $150 controller - but go with OS
- Proof of concept: gather energy effectively. Make a hotspot.
- 1 ton turbine - 1 ton of water per hour
- $100 per panel
- Probably discount at 1000 glass pieces
- Pole in front in picture is the detector
- Photo sensors are $1 each, key to the project
- Shower head screws into PVC
Conversation of Leo Gerst with Alex Hornstein
Forwarded message ----------
From: Alex Hornstein <alex#at#nublabs#dot#com> Date: Fri, Aug 8, 2008 at 4:23 PM Subject: Re: Heliostat Thesis To: Leo Gerst <leogerst#at#gmail#dot#com>
hey Leo,
My (undergrad and only) thesis was actually on designing and building a handheld oscilloscope. I've been working for the past three or four years on heliostats and solar stuff in general, but I don't have any academic papers for you.
I like what you've done, and it looks pretty advanced. Nobody's ever beat a cost of $250 for a square meter of built, installed and actuated heliostat, and it's exciting that your cost is so low. Looking at your youtube video of your mirrors moving, I really appreciate your sensing solution--that's very smart and effective. I think your biggest problem right now is of accuracy. Looking at the step size of your mirrors as they move, it looks like their accuracy is worse than .5 degrees, and the maximum theoretical concentration a field of heliostats is limited by your angular error (as well as the optics of your receiver). I'd work on improving that.
Arduino-Based Heliostat Controller
From Daan van Geijlswijk, daan #at# zininzelfdoen.nl, who is working on an open source heliostat system: http://zininzelfdoen.ning.com/
Work by Gabriel Miller at Cerebral Meltdown
Heliostats are generally used for solar energy. Although not as popular as solar panels, they can potentially give you access to considerable amounts of untapped heat energy for a much lower price, assuming, of course, you build it yourself.
Work by Brendan from heliostats.org
Brendan from Heliostats.org has been making some progress with his heliostat project. The gears you see in the above picture were printed out with his Makerbot. Pretty neat idea. A printable heliostat for solar power. The future looks very cool indeed.
Work by Lucifer Ursum
Here is a heliostat which was sent in by Mark. He says that he has had it up and running for about a year now without having to make any recalibrations. It looks pretty cool. He has several more projects on his site besides just this one, so don't forget to check them out too. More information at Heliostaat.nl (in Dutch).
Work by Rob at IwillTry.org
Array of 7 mirrors, each 1′x4′ in size mounted to a 4′x8′ plywood backing reinforced by a 2×3 frame to prevent warping. The frame is supported by a welded steel gimbal mount allowing rotation about both horizontal and vertical axes. Each axis is equipped with a stepper motor and leadscrew to adjust the position. Link here
Possible heliostat applications in the OSE context
- broad uses for concentrating solar power (CSP)
- lighting and space heating for buildings (provides additional degrees of architectural freedom, e.g. house doesn't have to have large south facing windows, can have smaller windows if there are heliostats funneling in sunlight and heat; could improve underground housing and Earthships)
- improved solar cooking (more power)
- enhanced lighting and heating of greenhouses, either directly or with hot water
- improved electricity yield of photovoltaic cells (more light=more power, although at some point the PV cells get too hot and efficiency goes down; this can be prevented by coupling with a solar water heating system which keeps the PV cells cool and puts out hot water at the same time)
- water heating for various applications; examples: aquaponics (see Tilapia aquaculture)
- solar alarm clock (let's hope that the sun is shining when you have to wake up !)
- steam for wide variety of uses (sterilizing and cleaning things, soil sterilization, industrial process heat, etc.)
- biomass drying, even solar torrefaction (examples of wet biomass: biogas slurry, manure, humanure, duckweed, wood etc.)
- solar pyrolysis system for biochar production where all of the heat would come from sunlight and none of the pyrolysis products such as bio-oil and various biochemicals would have to be used up to keep the reaction going. This would increase the efficiency of biomass use. It is an unproven idea - no designs exist.
- solar distillation of alcohol and other fuels (save biomass fuel for other uses such as biochar)
- to power an open source modern steam engine
- novel type of heat engine where compressed air is heated up by focused sunlight, then released at high pressure, pneumatically driving electric generator (unproven idea, no designs exist, methinks)
- extreme solar concentration for metallurgy (requires something like a Fresnel lens, ideally made of glass)