Arizona solar plant achieves six hours after sun goes down
(Phys.org) —Abengoa's Solana plant in the desert near Gila Bend,
Arizona, passed commercial testing this week The 280-megawatt Solana
solar thermal power plant producing electricity without direct sunlight
made the announcement on Wednesday. Abengoa said Wednesday
that the facility, about 70 miles southwest of Phoenix, can store the
sun's power for six hours via thermal energy. The three -square-mile
facility near Gila Bend uses concentrated solar power (CSP) technology
to collect the sun's heat. Thermal energy storage is Solana's
distinctive feature. At 280 megawatts, Solana is one of the largest
plants using parabolic mirrors. Its 2,700 parabolic trough mirrors
follow the sun to focus heat on a pipe containing a heat transfer fluid,
which is a synthetic oil. The heat transfer fluid flows to steam
boilers, where it heats water to create steam. The steam drives
140-megawatt turbines to produce electricity.
http://phys.org/news/2013-10-arizona-solar-hours-sun.html#nwlt
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