Keeping
Cool With Solar-Powered Refrigeration
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Designed
to function in arid to semi-arid regions
with at least 5 sun-hours per day, the
photovoltaic, direct-drive SunDanzer solar refrigerator is a chest-type cabinet with a 105-liter internal volume,
a lockable top-opening door, a corrosion-resistant
coated steel exterior, and a patented low-frost
system.
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Pioneered by NASA
to provide power for satellites and spacecraft, photovoltaics
is a viable source of energy used to light over 1
million rural homes around the world. Photovoltaic
(PV) cells directly convert sunlight into electricity,
without having to utilize limited fossil fuel resources.
PV energy contributes to improved air quality and
aids in the reduction of greenhouse gases that play
a role in global warming. For example, when it displaces
coal-fired generation, a common source of electricity
among power plants, harmful sulfur dioxide and nitrous
oxide emissions are eliminated.
Most
homes running on PV energy, however, employ simplistic
lighting systems that are incapable of providing
refrigeration. This can be especially troublesome
for areas in which no conventional power source exists,
including remote automated weather stations, forest
stations, and Third World villages.
In the midst of developing
battery-free, solar-powered refrigeration and air
conditioning systems for habitats in space, David
Bergeron, the team leader for NASAs Advanced Refrigerator Technology Team at Johnson Space Center, acknowledged
the need for a comparable solar refrigerator that
could operate in conjunction with the simple lighting
systems already in place on Earth. Bergeron, a 20-year
veteran in the aerospace industry, founded the company
Solus Refrigeration, Inc., in 1999 to take the patented
advanced refrigeration technology he codeveloped
with his teammate, Johnson engineer Michael Ewert,
to commercial markets. Now known as SunDanze Refrigeration,
Inc., Bergerons company is producing battery-free, PV refrigeration systems under license to
NASA, and selling them globally.
Designed to function
in arid to semi-arid regions with at least 5 sun-hours
per day, the PV direct-drive, or PV direct, SunDanzer solar refrigerator is a chest-type cabinet with a 105-liter (3.7 cubic feet)
internal volume, a lockable top-opening door, a corrosion-resistant
coated steel exterior, and a patented low-frost system.
It uses thermal storage for cooling efficiency, with
a direct connection between the vapor compression
cooling system and the PV module. This is accomplished
by integrating a phase-change material into a well-insulated
refrigerator cabinet and developing a microprocessor-based
control system that permits the direct connection
of a PV module to a variable-speed compressor. The
integration allows for peak power-point tracking
and the elimination of batteries (thus, the environmental threat of improper battery disposal is eliminated).
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| SunDanzer solar-powered
refrigerators can keep contents cold for 7
days, even during extensive periods of cloudy
weather when sunlight is not available for
energy production. |
For the phase-change
material, SunDanzer uses a nontoxic, low-cost, water-based
solution with exceptional freezing properties. The
variable speed feature allows the compressor to operate
longer during the day and better utilize the variable
solar resource. A fixed speed compressor, conversely,
can only use about 50 percent of the solar resource,
and would not be able to begin cooling as early in
the morning or as late in the afternoon, when the
sun is low and not shining directly on SunDanzers solar panel. It would also waste power during solar noon, when the available
power is more than the compressor needs to run.
The solar refrigerators
thermal storage material provides 7 days of reserve
cold storage, even in tropical climates, or during
extensive periods of cloudy weather when sunlight
is not available for energy production. Additionally,
the unit is manufactured to run on as little as 90
to 120 watts of rated PV power. The combination of
a super quiet compressor and fan ensure nearly silent
operation, while light indicators on the front of
the refrigerator inform users of the status of the
thermal reserve. For frequently cloudy regions or
areas with less than 5 sun-hours per day, SunDanze
Refrigeration offers highly efficient battery-powered
refrigerators, as well as freezers. These units run on 12 or 24 volts, direct current, and require a smaller PV or renewable
energy system.
Prior to commercialization
of the battery-free solar refrigerator in October
2001, NASA installed the original prototype unit
in a covered, outdoor location at Johnson in Houston,
Texas. For almost 3 years, it was used to store lunches
and soft drinks, and was exposed to various experiments,
including various defrosting tests. After undergoing
several refinements to right the problems encountered,
the NASA unit achieved satisfactory results, despite
the hot, humid, coastal environment of Houston.
NASA also issued grants
to New Mexico State University and Texas Southern
University that allowed students and faculty to perform
further evaluations of the solar refrigeration technology
in a realistic field setting. Testing at New Mexico
State included the installation of a battery-free
model that consistently cooled up to 6 gallons of
drinking water per day, for a period of 15 days,
in the dry, desert-like city of Las Cruces. The Texas
Southern University tests verified that the solar
refrigerator could maintain refrigeration for over
a week of continuous overcast weather.
Besides residential
homes and stores, applications for the solar refrigerator
include cabins, vacation houses, eco-friendly resorts,
farms, medical clinics, and street vendor carts.
Johnsons Ewert foresees an even wider market with mass production, noting that approximately
2 billion of Earths inhabitants do not have electricity.
SunDanzer is
a trademark of SunDanze Refrigeration, Inc.
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