| United States Patent Application |
20050242232
|
| Kind Code
|
A1
|
|
Bennett, Charles L.
|
November 3, 2005
|
Solar thermal aircraft
Abstract
A solar thermal powered aircraft powered by heat energy from the sun. A
heat engine, such as a Stirling engine, is carried by the aircraft body
for producing power for a propulsion mechanism, such as a propeller. The
heat engine has a thermal battery in thermal contact with it so that heat
is supplied from the thermal battery. A solar concentrator, such as
reflective parabolic trough, is movably connected to an optically
transparent section of the aircraft body for receiving and concentrating
solar energy from within the aircraft. Concentrated solar energy is
collected by a heat collection and transport conduit, and heat
transported to the thermal battery. A solar tracker includes a heliostat
for determining optimal alignment with the sun, and a drive motor
actuating the solar concentrator into optimal alignment with the sun
based on a determination by the heliostat.
| Inventors: |
Bennett, Charles L.; (Livermore, CA)
|
| Correspondence Name and Address:
|
James S. Tak
Assistant Laboratory Counsel
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
P.O. Box 808, L-703
Livermore
CA
94551
US
|
| Assignee Name and Adress: |
The Regents of the University of California
|
| Serial No.:
|
835665 |
| Series Code:
|
10
|
| Filed:
|
April 30, 2004 |
| U.S. Current Class: |
244/53R; 244/58; 244/60 |
| U.S. Class at Publication: |
244/053.00R; 244/060; 244/058 |
| Intern'l Class: |
B64C 039/00 |
Goverment Interests
[0001] The United States Government has rights in this invention pursuant
to Contract No. W-7405-ENG48 between the United States Department of
Energy and the University of California for the operation of Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory.
Claims
I claim:
1. An aircraft powered by the heat of the sun comprising: an aircraft body
capable of producing lift and sustained free flight when propelled; heat
engine means carried by said aircraft body for producing power;
propulsion means powered by said heat engine means for propelling said
aircraft; heat storage means in thermal contact with said heat engine
means for supplying heat thereto; solar concentration means movably
connected to said aircraft body for receiving and concentrating solar
energy; solar tracking means including means for determining whether said
solar concentration means is optimally aligned with the sun, and means
for actuating said solar concentration means into optimal alignment with
the sun based on said determination; and heat collection/transport means
for collecting the concentrated solar energy and transporting heat to
said heat storage means.
2. The aircraft of claim 1, wherein said aircraft body includes an
optically transparent section, and said solar concentration means is
movably mounted in said optically transparent section so that incident
solar flux is transmitted therethrough to said solar concentration means.
3. The aircraft of claim 2, wherein said optically transparent section is
on a fuselage of said aircraft body.
4. The aircraft of claim 2, wherein said optically transparent section is
on a wing of said aircraft body.
5. The aircraft of claim 2, wherein said solar concentration means is a
reflective parabolic trough for concentrating solar energy along a focal
axis thereof and adapted to rotate about said focal axis, and said heat
collection/transport means is positioned along said focal axis to collect
the concentrated solar energy.
6. The aircraft of claim 5, wherein said means for determining optimal
alignment comprises a heliostat mounted on said reflective parabolic
trough for rotation therewith about said focal axis.
7. The aircraft of claim 6, wherein said heliostat is located along a
symmetric plane of said reflective parabolic trough and adapted to detect
a shadow of said heat collection/transport means for use in the optimal
alignment determination.
8. The aircraft of claim 7, wherein said heliostat includes solar cells
symmetrically arranged about said symmetric plane
9. The aircraft of claim 8, wherein said solar cells include a center
cell, and two outer cells on opposite sides of the center cell.
10. The aircraft of claim 9, wherein, in a sun tracking mode, said
heliostat is adapted to detect deviations from optimal alignment of said
reflective parabolic trough by detecting voltage differences between said
two outer cells.
11. The aircraft of claim 9, wherein, in a sun searching mode, said
heliostat is adapted to locate the position of the sun by detecting the
voltage difference between the center cell and the average of the two
outer cells.
12. The aircraft of claim 8, wherein the solar cells of said heliostat
provide power to said actuation means to rotate said reflective parabolic
trough into optimal alignment with the sun.
13. The aircraft of claim 5, wherein said heat collection/transport means
comprises a heat pipe containing a heat transfer working fluid and
connected at one end to said heat storage means.
14. The aircraft of claim 13, wherein said heat pipe has a triangular
cross-section forming a single channel containing the heat transfer
working fluid.
15. The aircraft of claim 13, wherein said heat pipe comprises multiple
channels in parallel containing the heat transfer working fluid.
16. The aircraft of claim 15, wherein said multiple channels each have a
triangular cross-section.
17. The aircraft of claim 13, wherein said heat collection/transport means
further comprises an optically transparent heat collector envelope
coaxially surrounding said heat pipe and supporting a vacuum
therebetween, said heat collector envelope allowing concentrated solar
energy to be transmitted to said heat pipe while substantially inhibiting
conductive and convective heat loss therefrom.
18. The aircraft of claim 17, wherein said heat collector envelope has an
anti-reflection coating that decreases the transmission loss of sunlight
to said heat pipe, and minimizes radiative heating of said heat collector
envelope by said heat pipe.
19. The aircraft of claim 13, wherein said heat pipe contains sodium as
the heat transfer working fluid.
20. The aircraft of claim 13, wherein said heat pipe contains lithium as
the heat transfer working fluid.
21. The aircraft of claim 13, wherein said heat pipe has a bend section
which slopes downward away from said heat storage means, for draining the
heat transfer working fluid away from said heat storage means during dark
periods.
22. The aircraft of claim 13, further comprising a back-reflector adjacent
the heat pipe at a side thereof opposite the reflective parabolic trough,
for reflecting radiation from said heat pipe back thereto.
23. The aircraft of claim 22, wherein said means for determining optimal
alignment uses a shadow of said back-reflector for said determination.
24. The aircraft of claim 1, wherein said heat storage means comprises a
thermal container and a mixture of lithium hydride and lithium metal
contained therein.
25. The aircraft of claim 24, wherein said mixture of lithium hydride and
lithium metal is in substantial equilibrium with dissociation products,
including hydrogen gas, and liquid phase lithium and lithium hydride.
26. The aircraft of claim 24, wherein said thermal container includes an
inner containment shell structure and an outer vacuum shell supporting an
evacuated space therebetween.
27. The aircraft of claim 26, wherein said thermal container includes
thermal battery insulation in said evacuated space comprising multiple
layers of highly reflective material to shield against radiation.
28. The aircraft of claim 1, wherein said propulsion means includes at
least one propeller operably coupled to said heat engine means to be
driven thereby.
29. The aircraft of claim 1, wherein said propulsion means includes at
least one ducted fan system operably coupled to said heat engine means to
be driven thereby, and said aircraft body has an air inlet and an air
outlet which leads air into and out of said at least one ducted fan
system, respectively.
30. The aircraft of claim 29, wherein said at least ducted fan system is
located near a stern end of said aircraft body.
31. The aircraft of claim 29, wherein said air inlet and said air outlet
leads air past a cold side heat exchanger of said heat engine means for
convective cooling thereof.
32. The aircraft of claim 1, wherein said heat engine means comprises at
least two heat engines.
33. The aircraft of claim 32, wherein each of said heat engines is
independently powered by and associated with a corresponding heat storage
means, solar concentration means, solar tracking means, and heat
collection/transport means.
34. A solar thermal powered aircraft comprising: an aircraft fuselage
having an optically-transparent section; wing means extending from said
aircraft fuselage and capable of producing lift and sustained free flight
when propelled; a heat engine for producing power and carried by said
aircraft fuselage, said heat engine having a heat storage medium in
thermal contact therewith for supplying heat thereto; at least one
propulsion device(s) powered by said heat engine for propelling said
aircraft; a solar concentrator movably mounted in said optically
transparent section so that incident solar flux is transmitted
therethrough to said solar concentrator for receiving and concentrating
solar energy; a solar tracker adapted to determine whether said solar
concentrator is optimally aligned with the sun, and actuate said solar
concentrator into optimal alignment with the sun based on said
determination, for tracking the position of the sun; and a heat
collection and transporting conduit adapted to collect the concentrated
solar energy and transport heat to said heat storage medium.
35. A solar thermal powered aircraft comprising: an aircraft fuselage;
wing means extending from said aircraft fuselage and capable of producing
lift and sustained free flight when propelled, said wing means having at
least two optically-transparent sections; and associated with each
optically-transparent section: a heat engine carried by said wing means
for producing power, and having a heat storage medium in thermal contact
therewith for supplying heat thereto; a propulsion device powered by the
corresponding heat engine for propelling said aircraft; a solar
concentrator movably mounted in the corresponding optically transparent
section so that incident solar flux is transmitted therethrough to said
solar concentrator for receiving and concentrating solar energy; a solar
tracker adapted to determine whether the corresponding solar concentrator
is optimally aligned with the sun and to actuate said solar concentrator
into optimal alignment with the sun based on said determination, for
tracking the position of the sun; and a heat collection and transporting
conduit adapted to collect the concentrated solar energy and transport
heat to the corresponding heat storage medium.
36. The aircraft of claim 34 or 35, wherein said solar concentrator is a
reflective parabolic trough for concentrating solar energy along a focal
axis thereof and adapted to rotate about said focal axis, and said heat
collection and transporting conduit is positioned along said focal axis
to collect the concentrated solar energy.
37. The aircraft of claim 36, wherein said solar tracker includes a
heliostat mounted on said reflective parabolic trough for rotation
therewith about said focal axis.
38. The aircraft of claim 37, wherein said heliostat is located along a
symmetric plane of said reflective parabolic trough and adapted to detect
a shadow of said heat collection and transport conduit for use in the
optimal alignment determination.
39. The aircraft of claim 38, wherein said heliostat includes solar cells
symmetrically arranged about said symmetric plane
40. The aircraft of claim 39, wherein said solar cells include a center
cell, and two outer cells on opposite sides of the center cell.
41. The aircraft of claim 40, wherein, in a sun tracking mode, said
heliostat is adapted to detect deviations from optimal alignment of said
reflective parabolic trough by detecting voltage differences between said
two outer cells.
42. The aircraft of claim 40, wherein, in a sun searching mode, said
heliostat is adapted to locate the position of the sun by detecting the
voltage difference between the center cell and the average of the two
outer cells.
43. The aircraft of claim 39, wherein the solar cells of said heliostat
provide power to said actuation means to rotate said reflective parabolic
trough into optimal alignment with the sun.
44. The aircraft of claim 36, wherein said heat collection and
transporting conduit comprises a heat pipe containing a heat transfer
working fluid and connected at one end to said heat storage medium.
45. The aircraft of claim 44, wherein said heat pipe has a triangular
cross-section forming a single channel containing the heat transfer
working fluid.
46. The aircraft of claim 44, wherein said heat pipe comprises multiple
channels in parallel containing the heat transfer working fluid.
47. The aircraft of claim 46, wherein said multiple channels each have a
triangular cross-section.
48. The aircraft of claim 44, wherein said heat collection and
transporting conduit further comprises an optically transparent heat
collector envelope coaxially surrounding said heat pipe and supporting a
vacuum therebetween, said heat collector envelope allowing concentrated
solar energy to be transmitted to said heat pipe while substantially
inhibiting conductive and convective heat loss therefrom.
49. The aircraft of claim 48, wherein said heat collector envelope has an
anti-reflection coating that decreases the transmission loss of sunlight
to said heat pipe, and minimizes radiative heating of said heat collector
envelope by said heat pipe.
50. The aircraft of claim 44, wherein said heat pipe contains sodium as
the heat transfer working fluid.
51. The aircraft of claim 44, wherein said heat pipe contains lithium as
the heat transfer working fluid.
52. The aircraft of claim 44, wherein said heat pipe has a bend section
which slopes downward away from said heat storage medium, for draining
the heat transfer working fluid away from said heat storage medium during
dark periods.
53. The aircraft of claim 44, further comprising a back-reflector adjacent
the heat pipe at a side thereof opposite the reflective parabolic trough,
for reflecting radiation from said heat pipe back thereto.
54. The aircraft of claim 53, wherein said solar tracker uses a shadow of
said back-reflector for said optimal alignment determination.
55. The aircraft of claim 34 or 35, wherein said heat storage means
comprises a thermal container and a mixture of lithium hydride and
lithium metal contained therein.
56. The aircraft of claim 55, wherein said mixture of lithium hydride and
lithium metal is in substantial equilibrium with dissociation products,
including hydrogen gas, and liquid phase lithium and lithium hydride.
57. The aircraft of claim 55, wherein said thermal container includes an
inner containment shell structure and an outer vacuum shell supporting an
evacuated space therebetween.
58. The aircraft of claim 57, wherein said thermal container includes
thermal battery insulation in said evacuated space comprising multiple
layers of highly reflective material to shield against radiation.
59. The aircraft of claims 1, 34 or 35, wherein said heat engine means is
a Stirling engine having a hot side heat exchanger and a cold side heat
exchanger.
60. The aircraft of claim 59, wherein said Stirling engine includes at
least one helical groove on one of a crankshaft and a journal surrounding
said crankshaft, for self-pressurizing said Stirling engine.
61. The aircraft of claim 60, wherein said Stirling engine includes a
crankcase pressure relief valve for controlling the crankcase pressure
and the power output of said Stirling engine.
62. The aircraft of claim 60, wherein said Stirling engine is hermetically
sealed and uses helium as the working fluid therein.
63. The aircraft of claim 62, wherein said Stirling engine includes a
crankcase pressure relief valve for controlling the crankcase pressure
and the power output of said Stirling engine, and a sealed chamber
connected to said crankcase pressure relief valve and an intake end of
said helical groove, for recycling helium released by said crankcase
pressure relief valve.
64. The aircraft of claim 59, wherein said Stirling engine includes
cooling fins adjacent the cold side heat exchanger.
65. The aircraft of claim 34, wherein said propulsion device include a
propeller operably coupled to said heat engine to be driven thereby.
66. The aircraft of claim 35, wherein said propulsion device include a
propeller operably coupled to said heat engine to be driven thereby.
67. The aircraft of claim 34, wherein said propulsion device includes a
ducted fan system operably coupled to said heat engine to be driven
thereby.
68. The aircraft of claim 35, wherein said propulsion device includes a
ducted fan system operably coupled to said heat engine to be driven
thereby.
69. An aircraft powered by the heat of the sun comprising: an aircraft
body capable of producing lift and sustained free flight when propelled;
heat engine means carried by said aircraft body for producing power;
propulsion means powered by said heat engine means for propelling said
aircraft; solar concentration means movably connected to said aircraft
body for receiving and concentrating solar energy; solar tracking means
including means for determining whether said solar concentration means is
optimally aligned with the sun, and means for actuating said solar
concentration means into optimal alignment with the sun based on said
determination; and heat collection/transport means for collecting the
concentrated solar energy and transporting heat to said heat engine
means.
70. A solar thermal power plant comprising: a heat engine for producing
power; a heat storage medium in thermal contact with a hot side of said
heat engine for supplying heat thereto; an actuable reflective parabolic
trough for receiving and concentrating solar energy along a focal axis
thereof and adapted to rotate about said focal axis; a solar tracker
adapted to determine whether said reflective parabolic trough is
optimally aligned with the sun and to actuate said reflective parabolic
trough into optimal alignment with the sun based on said determination,
for tracking the position of the sun; and a heat collection and
transporting conduit positioned along said focal axis and adapted to
collect the concentrated solar energy and transport heat to said heat
storage medium.
71. The solar thermal power plant of claim 70, wherein said solar tracker
includes a heliostat mounted on said reflective parabolic trough for
rotation therewith about said focal axis.
72. The solar thermal power plant of claim 71, wherein said heliostat is
located along a symmetric plane of said reflective parabolic trough and
adapted to detect a shadow of said heat collection and transport conduit
for use in the optimal alignment determination.
73. The solar thermal power plant of claim 72, wherein said heliostat
includes solar cells symmetrically arranged about said symmetric plane
74. The solar thermal power plant of claim 73, wherein said solar cells
include a center cell, and two outer cells on opposite sides of the
center cell.
75. The solar thermal power plant of claim 74, wherein, in a sun tracking
mode, said heliostat is adapted to detect deviations from optimal
alignment of said reflective parabolic trough by detecting voltage
differences between said two outer cells.
76. The solar thermal power plant of claim 74, wherein, in a sun searching
mode, said heliostat is adapted to locate the position of the sun by
detecting the voltage difference between the center cell and the average
of the two outer cells.
77. The solar thermal power plant of claim 73, wherein the solar cells of
said heliostat provide power to said actuation means to rotate said
reflective parabolic trough into optimal alignment with the sun.
78. The solar thermal power plant of claim 73, wherein said heat
collection and transporting conduit comprises a heat pipe containing a
heat transfer working fluid and connected at one end to said heat storage
medium.
79. The solar thermal power plant of claim 78, wherein said heat pipe has
a triangular cross-section forming a single channel containing the heat
transfer working fluid.
80. The solar thermal power plant of claim 78, wherein said heat pipe
comprises multiple channels in parallel containing the heat transfer
working fluid.
81. The solar thermal power plant of claim 80, wherein said multiple
channels each have a triangular cross-section.
82. The solar thermal power plant of claim 78, wherein said heat
collection and transporting conduit further comprises an optically
transparent heat collector envelope coaxially surrounding said heat pipe
and supporting a vacuum therebetween, said heat collector envelope
allowing concentrated solar energy to be transmitted to said heat pipe
while substantially inhibiting conductive and convective heat loss
therefrom.
83. The solar thermal power plant of claim 82, wherein said heat collector
envelope has an anti-reflection coating that decreases the transmission
loss of sunlight to said heat pipe, and minimizes radiative heating of
said heat collector envelope by said heat pipe.
84. The solar thermal power plant of claim 78, wherein said heat pipe
contains sodium as the heat transfer working fluid.
85. The solar thermal power plant of claim 78, wherein said heat pipe
contains lithium as the heat transfer working fluid.
86. The solar thermal power plant of claim 78, wherein said heat pipe has
a bend section which slopes downward away from said heat storage medium,
for draining the heat transfer working fluid away from said heat storage
medium during dark periods.
87. The solar thermal power plant of claim 78, further comprising a
back-reflector adjacent the heat pipe at a side thereof opposite the
reflective parabolic trough, for reflecting radiation from said heat pipe
back thereto.
88. The solar thermal power plant of claim 88, wherein said solar tracker
uses a shadow of said back-reflector for said optimal alignment
determination.
89. The solar thermal power plant of claim 70, wherein said heat storage
means comprises a thermal container and a mixture of lithium hydride and
lithium metal contained therein.
90. The solar thermal power plant of claim 89, wherein said mixture of
lithium hydride and lithium metal is in substantial equilibrium with
dissociation products, including hydrogen gas, and liquid phase lithium
and lithium hydride.
91. The solar thermal power plant of claim 89, wherein said thermal
container includes an inner containment shell structure and an outer
vacuum shell supporting an evacuated space therebetween.
92. The solar thermal power plant of claim 91, wherein said thermal
container includes thermal battery insulation in said evacuated space
comprising multiple layers of highly reflective material to shield
against radiation.
93. The solar thermal power plant of claim 70, wherein said heat engine is
a Stirling engine having a hot side heat exchanger and a cold side heat
exchanger.
94. The solar thermal power plant of claim 93, wherein said Stirling
engine includes at least one helical groove on one of a crankshaft and a
journal surrounding said crankshaft, for self-pressurizing said Stirling
engine.
95. The solar thermal power plant of claim 94, wherein said Stirling
engine includes a crankcase pressure relief valve for controlling the
crankcase pressure and the power output of said Stirling engine.
96. The solar thermal power plant of claim 94, wherein said Stirling
engine is hermetically sealed and uses helium as the working fluid
therein.
97. The solar thermal power plant of claim 96, wherein said Stirling
engine includes a crankcase pressure relief valve for controlling the
crankcase pressure and the power output of said Stirling engine, and a
sealed chamber connected to said crankcase pressure relief valve and an
intake end of said helical groove, for recycling helium released by said
crankcase pressure relief valve.
98. The solar thermal power plant of claim 93, wherein said Stirling
engine includes cooling fins adjacent the cold side heat exchanger.
99. An improved Stirling engine of a type having a crankcase with opposing
hot and cold heat exchanging ends, a piston capable of reciprocating
within said crankcase between the hot and cold heat exchanging ends, a
crankshaft coupled to said piston and extending out from said crankcase
so that reciprocation of said piston rotates said crankshaft, and a
journal surrounding said crankshaft, the improvement comprising: at least
one helical groove on a surface of one of said crankshaft and said
journal and bounded by a surface of the other one of said crankshaft and
said journal, said helical groove(s) communicating between an inner
crankcase volume and the ambient atmosphere so that the relative motion
between the rotating crankshaft and said journal pumps ambient atmosphere
into said crankcase to self-pressurize the same.
100. The improvement of claim 99, wherein said helical groove(s) is
adapted to self-pressurize the crankcase during operation of said
improved Stirling engine.
101. The improvement of claim 100, wherein said Stirling engine includes a
crankcase pressure relief valve for controlling the crankcase pressure
and the power output of said Stirling engine.
102. The improvement of claim 99, wherein said Stirling engine includes
cooling fins adjacent the cold side heat exchanger.
103. An improved Stirling engine of a type having a crankcase with
opposing hot and cold heat exchanging ends, a piston capable of
reciprocating within said crankcase between the hot and cold heat
exchanging ends, a crankshaft coupled to said piston and extending out
from said crankcase so that reciprocation of said piston rotates said
crankshaft, and a journal surrounding said crankshaft, the improvement
comprising: a working fluid within an hermetically sealed crankcase; a
crankcase pressure relief valve for controlling the crankcase pressure
and the power output of said Stirling engine; a closed reservoir for
receiving working fluid released from said crankcase pressure relief
valve; and at least one helical groove on a surface of one of said
crankshaft and said journal and bounded by a surface of the other one of
said crankshaft and said journal, said helical groove(s) communicating
between an inner crankcase volume and said closed reservoir so that the
relative motion between the rotating crankshaft and said journal pumps
the working fluid into said crankcase to self-pressurize the same,
whereby the working fluid released from said crankcase is recycled back
into said crankcase.
104. The improvement of claim 103, wherein the working fluid is helium.
105. The improvement of claim 103, wherein the working fluid is hydrogen.
106. The improvement of claim 105, further comprising: a hydrogen
permeable cap capping the hot end of the Stirling engine; and a
lithium-hydride based thermal storage medium in contact with said
hydrogen permeable cap and the hot side of said Stirling engine; wherein
the slow loss of hydrogen from the lithium-hydride is balanced by a slow
gain from the Stirling engine hydrogen working fluid through said
hydrogen permeable cap, whereby the hydrogen containment of the thermal
battery is extended.
107. A thermal battery for use with a heat engine, comprising: a thermally
insulated container; and a heat storage medium contained in said
thermally insulated container and in thermal contact with a hot side of a
heat engine for supplying heat thereto, said heat storage medium
comprising a mixture of lithium hydride and lithium metal.
108. The thermal battery of claim 107, wherein said mixture of lithium
hydride and lithium metal is in substantial equilibrium with dissociation
products, including hydrogen gas, and liquid phase lithium and lithium
hydride.
109. The thermal battery of claim 107, wherein said thermally insulated
container includes an inner containment shell structure and an outer
vacuum shell supporting an evacuated space therebetween.
110. The thermal battery of claim 107, wherein said thermally insulated
container includes thermal battery insulation in said evacuated space
comprising multiple layers of highly reflective material to shield
against radiation.
Description
I. FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0002] This invention relates to solar powered aircraft and energy
generation systems using heat engines to convert solar thermal energy
into mechanical energy. In particular, the invention relates to a solar
powered aircraft employing a lightweight and highly efficient solar
thermal power system having a heat engine with a heat storage medium in
thermal contact therewith, a parabolic trough-type solar concentrator
actuably mounted in an optically transparent section of the aircraft to
receive and concentrate solar energy, and a heat pipe at a focal axis of
the parabolic trough for collecting the concentrated solar energy and
transporting heat to the heat storage medium. A solar tracker determines
optimal alignment of the solar concentrator with respect to the sun and
actuates the solar concentrator to achieve optimal alignment. The heat
storage medium has a high specific energy, especially for the temperature
range of 800.degree. C. and above, which enables sufficient energy
storage during sunlight hours and is capable of maintaining power for
night time operation to enable continuous flight over a substantially
indefinite period.
II. BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0003] Working prototypes have demonstrated the feasibility and utility of
solar powered aircraft. Many if not most solar powered aircraft, however,
rely on the photovoltaic conversion of sunlight to electricity to power
an electric motor-based propulsion system. Batteries (or electrolyzer,
gas storage, and regenerative fuel cells) are carried onboard the
aircraft to store electrical energy and keep the aircraft aloft during
the night, so that flight time is not limited by fuel supply as it is on
a conventional aircraft. It is widely recognized, however, that onboard
voltaic batteries or electrolyzer, gas storage, and regenerative fuel
cell systems impose a substantial weight burden for all aircraft, and
especially for high-altitude, long range aircraft.
[0004] Another problem associated with photovoltaic power generation
arrangements for aircraft, especially high-altitude, long-range aircraft,
is the need to orient/ point the photovoltaic solar cells to face the
sun. Having wing-mounted arrays of solar panels can limit the efficiency
of the collection of solar power, especially at dawn and dusk, as
sunlight seldom strikes the solar panels "face on". Thus in order to
achieve a direct angle of impingement, the aircraft could be "banked"
(i.e. laterally incline the aircraft, such as by elevating one wing or
side higher or lower in relation to the opposite wing or side) in order
to face the sun. This practice is disclosed by U.S. Pat. No. 4,415,133 to
Phillips, as well as U.S. Pat. No. 5,518,205 to Wurst, et al.
Conventional aircraft, however, cannot maintain straight flight at a
large bank angle for extended lengths of time. Moreover, a related
problem is the significant restriction on the latitude range over which
aircraft may be flow, often seen with wing mounted solar energy
collection means, i.e. photovoltaic solar cells, characteristic of the
prior art. During winter, at higher northern latitudes, the maximum angle
of the sun above the horizon may be relatively small, and thus the
effective collection area of the wing surface may be severely restricted.
[0005] While the Phillips reference alternatively suggests that solar
cells may be placed on a tilting panel within a transparent fuselage
structure, this arrangement would require the inclusion of a cooling
system for the inner located cells, with the associated weight and
aerodynamic drag penalties. The cooling requirement discussed in Phillips
for maintaining high efficiency of inside-mounted cells is a generic
limitation common to all photo-voltaic solar cell powered aircraft. This
same limitation precludes the practical use of solar cells at the focus
of a high concentration factor solar collector, since excessive heating
of solar cells leads to substantially reduced efficiency.
[0006] Furthermore, the efficiency of photovoltaic electric energy
collection, storage, and utilization in the prior art is relatively
limited. Photovoltaic arrays of high efficiency are very expensive and
tend to lose efficiency at elevated temperatures, and thus are not
practical to use at the focus of a high flux solar concentrator. The
prior art system of photovoltaic electric energy collection, storage, and
utilization has a relatively small power to mass ratio. Thus the aircraft
must typically fly at an altitude high enough to be above the clouds, and
to avoid winds with velocities much higher than the airspeed of the
vehicle, as described in the Phillips reference. Because of its long
endurance and limited weight-carrying ability, this type of vehicle is
normally considered to be a pilotless aircraft.
[0007] Various ground based solar energy collectors and concentrators, and
interfaces to heat storage media and heat engines are also known. A few
examples include: U.S. Pat. No. 4,586,334 to Nilsson, and U.S. Pat. No.
6,487,859 to Mehos. The Nilsson patent discloses ". . . a solar energy
power generation system which includes means for collecting and
concentrating solar energy; heat storage means; Stirling engine means for
producing power", and ". . . the means for collecting and concentrating
solar energy is a reflective dish; and the heat transfer means includes
first and second heat pipes; the heat storage means is preferably a phase
change medium . . . " The Mehos patent discloses: ". . . sodium heat pipe
receivers for dish/Stirling systems", and cites references demonstrating:
". . .sodium vapor temperatures up to 790.degree. C." Additionally, U.S.
Pat. No. 4,125,122 discloses a heat pipe receiving energy from a solar
concentrator, U.S. Pat. No. 6,700,054B2 describes connecting to a
Stirling engine, among other things, and U.S. Pat. No. 4,088,120
describes a parabolic trough with a heat pipe at the focus connected to a
heat storage medium. None of these representative references, however,
disclose how the solar energy generation and storage system can be made
sufficiently lightweight that it would be able to provide for the
overnight propulsion of a solar-powered aircraft.
[0008] In addition, the utility of LiH as a thermal energy storage medium,
i.e. a "thermal battery," is known, and is based on the very high thermal
energy per unit mass characteristic of LiH. For example, the specific
energy released in the cooling of one kg of LiH from 1200 K to 600 K is
1900 W-hr. In contrast, lithium ion electrical storage batteries contain
less than 10% as much energy per kg. Even a Hydrogen-Oxygen recyclable
fuel cell with associated electrolyzer and gas storage contains no more
than approximately 1000 W-hr per kg. It is appreciated that no other
known solid, liquid, (or gaseous, if the mass of the requisite container
is accounted for) compound has as high a specific thermal energy content
as LiH for this temperature range. One example of LiH used as a thermal
energy storage medium is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,182,653 to Mavleos
et al. and directed to a Lithium hydride body heating device that uses
LiH as a phase change medium to store heat energy for use in providing
warmth to a diver. The '653 patent, however, does not disclose how highly
reactive LiH may be safely contained for long periods of time.
Theoretically, pure LiH has an infinite hydrogen vapor pressure just
beyond the melting point of LiH. Thus, a container of LiH constructed
according to the Mavleos disclosure, for example, may explode upon
reaching the melting point of LiH at about 700.degree. C.
[0009] Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an
aircraft powered by the heat of the sun.
[0010] Another object of the present invention is to provide a lightweight
and highly efficient solar power plant and system for powering an
aircraft by the heat of the sun.
[0011] Another object of the present invention is to provide an internally
mounted solar power plant and system for powering an aircraft which does
not require internal cooling.
[0012] And another object of the present invention is to provide a means
for efficiently powering a solar aircraft by using a high efficiency heat
engine, such as a Stirling engine.
[0013] Another object of the present invention is to provide a means for
storing sufficient solar energy accumulated during the day to enable
flight through the nighttime without excessive mass burden.
[0014] Another object of the present invention is to provide a means for
maximizing solar energy collection and concentration by optimally
aligning a heat collection element to the sun without re-orienting or
otherwise changing the flight characteristics of the aircraft, e.g.
banking.
[0015] Another object of the present invention is to provide a means for
conserving heat energy during night time operation by preventing backflow
of a heat transfer working fluid of a heat pipe.
[0016] These objects are achieved by the present invention described
hereinafter.
III. SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0017] One aspect of the present invention includes an aircraft powered by
the heat of the sun comprising: an aircraft body capable of producing
lift and sustained free flight when propelled; heat engine means carried
by said aircraft body for producing power; propulsion means powered by
said heat engine means for propelling said aircraft; heat storage -means
in thermal contact with said heat engine means for supplying heat
thereto; solar concentration means movably connected to said aircraft
body for receiving and concentrating solar energy; solar tracking means
including means for determining whether said solar concentration means is
optimally aligned with the sun, and means for actuating said solar
concentration means into optimal alignment with the sun based on said
determination; and heat collection/transport means for collecting the
concentrated solar energy and transporting heat to said heat storage
means.
[0018] Another aspect of the present invention includes a solar thermal
powered aircraft comprising: an aircraft fuselage having an
optically-transparent section; wing means extending from said aircraft
fuselage and capable of producing lift and sustained free flight when
propelled; a heat engine for producing power and carried by said aircraft
fuselage, said heat engine having a heat storage medium in thermal
contact therewith for supplying heat thereto; at least one propulsion
device(s) powered by said heat engine for propelling said aircraft; a
solar concentrator movably mounted in said optically transparent section
so that incident solar flux is transmitted therethrough to said solar
concentrator for receiving and concentrating solar energy; a solar
tracker adapted to determine whether said solar concentrator is optimally
aligned with the sun, and actuate said solar concentrator into optimal
alignment with the sun based on said determination, for tracking the
position of the sun; and a heat collection and transporting conduit
adapted to collect the concentrated solar energy and transport heat to
said heat storage medium.
[0019] Another aspect of the present invention includes a solar thermal
powered aircraft comprising: an aircraft fuselage; wing means extending
from said aircraft fuselage and capable of producing lift and sustained
free flight when propelled, said wing means having at least two
optically-transparent sections; and associated with each
optically-transparent section: a heat engine carried by said wing means
for producing power, and having a heat storage medium in thermal contact
therewith for supplying heat thereto; a propulsion device powered by the
corresponding heat engine for propelling said aircraft; a solar
concentrator movably mounted in the corresponding optically transparent
section so that incident solar flux is transmitted therethrough to said
solar concentrator for receiving and concentrating solar energy; a solar
tracker adapted to determine whether the corresponding solar concentrator
is optimally aligned with the sun and to actuate said solar concentrator
into optimal alignment with the sun based on said determination, for
tracking the position of the sun; and a heat collection and transporting
conduit adapted to collect the concentrated solar energy and transport
heat to the corresponding heat storage medium.
[0020] Another aspect of the present invention includes an aircraft
powered by the heat of the sun comprising: an aircraft body capable of
producing lift and sustained free flight when propelled; heat engine
means carried by said aircraft body for producing power; propulsion means
powered by said heat engine means for propelling said aircraft; solar
concentration means movably connected to said aircraft body for receiving
and concentrating solar energy; solar tracking means including means for
determining whether said solar concentration means is optimally aligned
with the sun, and means for actuating said solar concentration means into
optimal alignment with the sun based on said determination; and heat
collection/transport means for collecting the concentrated solar energy
and transporting heat to said heat engine means.
[0021] Another aspect of the present invention includes a solar thermal
power plant comprising: a heat engine for producing power; a heat storage
medium in thermal contact with a hot side of said heat engine for
supplying heat thereto; an actuable solar concentrator for receiving and
concentrating solar energy; a solar tracker adapted to determine whether
the corresponding solar concentrator is optimally aligned with the sun
and to actuate said solar concentrator into optimal alignment with the
sun based on said determination, for tracking the position of the sun;
and a heat collection and transporting conduit adapted to collect the
concentrated solar energy and transport heat to said heat storage medium.
[0022] Another aspect of the present invention includes an improved
Stirling engine of a type having a crankcase with opposing hot and cold
heat exchanging ends, a piston capable of reciprocating within said
crankcase between the hot and cold heat exchanging ends, a crankshaft
coupled to said piston and extending out from said crankcase so that
reciprocation of said piston rotates said crankshaft, and a journal
surrounding said crankshaft, the improvement comprising: at least one
helical groove on a surface of one of said crankshaft and said journal
and bounded by a surface of the other one of said crankshaft and said
journal, said helical groove(s) communicating between an inner crankcase
volume and the ambient atmosphere so that the relative motion between the
rotating crankshaft and said journal pumps ambient atmosphere into said
crankcase to self-pressurize the same.
[0023] Another aspect of the present invention includes an improved
Stirling engine of a type having a crankcase with opposing hot and cold
heat exchanging ends, a piston capable of reciprocating within said
crankcase between the hot and cold heat exchanging ends, a crankshaft
coupled to said piston and extending out from said crankcase so that
reciprocation of said piston rotates said crankshaft, and a journal
surrounding said crankshaft, the improvement comprising: a working fluid
within an hermetically sealed crankcase; a crankcase pressure relief
valve for controlling the crankcase pressure and the power output of said
Stirling engine; a closed reservoir for receiving working fluid released
from said crankcase pressure relief valve; and at least one helical
groove on a surface of one of said crankshaft and said journal and
bounded by a surface of the other one of said crankshaft and said
journal, said helical groove(s) communicating between an inner crankcase
volume and said closed reservoir so that the relative motion between the
rotating crankshaft and said journal pumps the working fluid into said
crankcase to self-pressurize the same, whereby working fluid released
from the crankcase is recycled back into said crankcase.
[0024] Another aspect of the present invention includes a solar thermal
battery for use with a heat engine, comprising: a thermally insulated
container; a heat storage medium contained in said thermally insulated
container and in thermal contact with a hot side of a heat engine for
supplying heat thereto, said heat storage medium comprising a mixture of
lithium hydride and lithium metal.
[0025] The present invention is generally directed to a lightweight,
highly efficient solar thermal powered aircraft, as well as a
lightweight, highly efficient solar thermal power plant for generating
mechanical power from solar energy. The solar thermal power plant of the
present invention powering the aircraft comprises a number of
components/subsystems including: a solar heat engine such as a Stirling
engine, a thermal battery and its associated multi-layer thermal
insulation; a solar concentrator mirror and an associated solar tracker
for determining optimal alignment with the sun and actuating into optimal
alignment; a heat collector and its associated heat pipe collecting and
transporting heat to the thermal battery. The solar concentrator mirror
is positioned at an optically transparent section of the aircraft body to
allow impinging solar radiation to pass through to the solar
concentrator. These components together in the manner described herein,
produce a comparably higher power to mass ratio than photovoltaic solar
powered aircraft, which is an important parameter for the propulsion
system of high altitude aircraft in particular.
IV. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0026] The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated into and form a
part of the disclosure, are as follows:
[0027] FIG. 1 is a perspective view of an exemplary embodiment of the
solar thermal aircraft of the present invention.
[0028] FIG. 2 is a side cross-sectional view of the solar thermal aircraft
taken along the line 2-2 of FIG. 1.
[0029] FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view of the solar thermal aircraft
fuselage taken along the line 3-3 of FIG. 2.
[0030] FIG. 3a is an enlarged cross-sectional view of the heat collection
element and back-reflector enclosed in circle 3a of FIG. 3.
[0031] FIG. 4 is an enlarged cross-sectional view of the heat collection
element enclosed in the circle 4 of FIG. 3a.
[0032] FIG. 5 is a perspective view of the heat storage vessel coupled to
a heat engine.
[0033] FIG. 6 is a cross-sectional view of the heat storage vessel taken
along the line 6-6 of FIG. 5.
[0034] FIG. 7 is a cross-sectional view of the heat storage vessel and the
heat engine taken along the line 7-7 of FIG. 5.
[0035] FIG. 8 is an enlarged cross-sectional view of the crankshaft
pumping structure enclosed in the circle 8 of FIG. 7.
[0036] FIG. 9 is an enlarged cross-sectional view of the lithium hydride
containment shell structure.
[0037] FIG. 10 is an enlarged cross-sectional view of the multi-layer
insulation structure.
[0038] FIG. 11 is a heliostat circuit diagram for sun-tracking mode.
[0039] FIG. 12 is a heliostat circuit diagram for sun-searching mode.
[0040] FIG. 13 is a heliostat mode switching circuit diagram.
[0041] FIG. 14 is a perspective view of a twin engine/twin collector solar
thermal aircraft.
[0042] FIG. 15 is a perspective view of single engine/twin pusher
propeller solar thermal aircraft.
[0043] FIG. 16 is a cross-sectional view of a Stirling engine.
[0044] FIG. 17 is a graph of hydrogen vapor pressure in equilibrium with
LiH--Li mixture.
[0045] FIG. 18 is a side cross-sectional view of a ducted fan embodiment
of the solar thermal powered aircraft.
[0046] FIG. 19 is a cross sectional view through an alternative heat pipe
embodiment comprising a 6 channel structure.
[0047] FIG. 20 is a cross-sectional view of an alternative heat storage
vessel and heat engine including a hermetically sealed reservoir of
working fluid.
V. DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0048] Reference numerals used in the following description are listed in
Table 1.
1TABLE 1
100 Solar thermal powered aircraft
102 Wing
103 Fuselage
104 Rudder
105
Elevator
106 Aileron
107 Transmission
108 Cooling
air inlet channel
109 Propeller
110 Concentrator mirror
111 Ruddervator
112 Transparent fuselage skin
113
Back-reflector
114 Solar concentrator support
115 Solar
concentrator drive motor
116 Heliostat
117 Heliostat
Photovoltaic A
118 Heliostat Photovoltaic B
119 Heliostat
Photovoltaic C
120 Heat collector
121 Antireflection
coating
122 Heat collector envelope
123 Evacuated space
124 Heat collector coating
125 Stainless steel shell
126
Vapor phase sodium
127 Liquid phase sodium
128 Sodium
condenser
129 Heat pipe
130 Thermal battery
131
Highly reflective vacuum shell
132 MLI (Multi-layer insulation)
layers of highly
reflective material
133 LiH containment
shell structure
134 Hydrogen& other dissociation products of
LiH
135 Spacers between MLI layers
136 Lithium hydride
and lithium
137 Lithium impervious alloy
139 Gold layer
140 Heat engine
141 Cooling fins
142 Hot side heat
exchanger
143 Regenerator heat exchanger
144 Cold side heat
exchanger
145 Crankshaft pump
146 Filter
147 Crank
mechanism
148 Crankshaft
149 Crankcase pressure relief
valve
150 Ducted fan
151 Expansion space
152
Displacer piston
153 Compression space
154 Power piston
155 Crankcase space
156 Displacer piston gap
157 Power
piston gap
158 Bend region of heat pipe
160 Working fluid
pressure vessel
161 Working fluid reservoir
162 Gas tight
journal bearing
163 Hydrogen permeable cap
164 Operational
amplifier
[0049] Turning now to the drawings, FIGS. 1 and 2 show an exemplary
embodiment of the aircraft of the present invention, generally indicated
at reference character 100. The aircraft 100 is shown having a
conventional fixed-wing airplane body configuration comprising a fuselage
103, and wings 102 and horizontal and vertical stabilizing fins extending
from the fuselage. As used herein and in the claims, the term "aircraft
body" generally includes the fuselage, the wings, and the horizontal and
vertical stabilizing fins, among other structural components connected to
and extending from the fuselage. Additionally, attitude control is
provided by rudder 104, elevators 105 (or a ruddervator 111 shown in FIG.
15) and ailerons 106. And a propulsion device, such as a propeller 109 in
FIG. 1, is coupled to an engine, such as heat engine 140 to propel the
aircraft, and thereby produce lift and sustain free flight of the
aircraft. Exemplary alternative embodiments of the aircraft body are
shown in FIGS. 14, 15 and 17 discussed in greater detail below.
[0050] FIGS. 1 and 2 also show the solar thermal power plant of the
aircraft 100 generally positioned in the interior of the aircraft body,
namely the fuselage 103. The solar thermal power plant includes a heat
engine 140, heat storage means i.e. a thermal battery 130 including a
heat storage container and medium, a solar tracking concentrator 110, and
a heat collection/transport conduit, device, or other means 120. The heat
engine 140 is shown mounted in the fuselage 103 at a forward end, with
the thermal battery 130 (and in particular the heat storage medium) in
thermal contact with a hot side of the heat engine. Due to its internal
location, a cooling air inlet channel 108 may be provided to direct
ambient air backwash from the propeller 109 to a cold side of the heat
engine for cooling. An alternative exemplary embodiment shown in FIG. 18
comprises a rear mount of a heat engine 140, with ambient air sucked past
cooling fins 141 by a rearward mounted ducted fan 150. The solar tracking
concentrator 110 is movably mounted for actuation in an optically
transparent section 112 of the aircraft body, shown in FIG. 2 as a
section of the fuselage 103. The optically transparent section 112 has a
fuselage skin which is made of an optically transparent, ultraviolet
resistant, lightweight material, such as TEDLAR from DuPont, that allows
most of the incident solar energy to be transmitted therethrough and to
the solar concentrator 110.
Solar Tracking Concentrator
[0051] FIGS. 2 and 3 show the solar concentrator, i.e. the concentrator
mirror 110, in the preferred form of a parabolic trough-shaped reflector,
which is movably mounted to a support structure 114 connected to the
fuselage. In particular, the concentrator mirror is mounted so as to
freely rotate about a rotational axis, which is preferably a focal axis
of the parabolic trough reflector. Furthermore, the rotational axis may
also be located to be coaxial with the central axis of the fuselage. In
any case, the concentrator mirror may be made of a lightweight, thin
plastic film, for example, stretched over a skeleton array of formers and
coated with a thin layer of highly reflective metal, such as gold or
silver. And the solar concentrator support structure 114 is preferably a
space frame that allows most of the incident solar flux to be transmitted
to the concentrator mirror 110. The entire solar concentrator assembly is
balanced, so that no torque is required to hold a particular orientation.
[0052] Rotational control of the solar concentrator is provided by a solar
tracking device or means including a device or means for determining
whether the solar concentrator is optimally aligned with the sun, and a
device or means for actuating, e.g. rotating, the solar concentrator
mirror into optimal alignment with the sun based on the optimal alignment
determination. As used herein and in the claims, "optimal alignment" is
that alignment and angle producing the highest concentration of solar
flux, i.e. a position "directly facing" the sun. The actuation device or
means may comprise, for example, a drive motor 115 (FIG. 2) mounted on
the rotational axis of the solar concentrator assembly. And the device or
means utilized for determining optimal alignment may be a heliostat 116
adapted to determine the alignment of the sun with respect to the focal
axis of the concentrator mirror 110 and operably connected to the drive
motor 115 to control the rotational actuation of the solar concentrator.
In particular, the heliostat is adapted to detect a shadow of a heat
collection and transport element (heat pipe) along the focal axis for use
in the optimal alignment determination. The heliostat 116 is shown in
FIG. 2 mounted on the concentrator mirror, and in particular, along a
symmetric plane of the reflective parabolic trough. The heliostat 116
includes sensing elements which are preferably solar cells (e.g. 117-119)
and which are preferably symmetrically arranged about the symmetric plane
of the concentrator mirror 110. In a preferred embodiment, the solar
cells include a center cell 118, and two outer cells 117, and 119 on
opposite sides of the center cell.
[0053] A preferred method of heliostat operation uses the one center and
two outer solar cells in a closed loop feedback stabilization system
involving two modes of operation: a sun-searching mode, and a
sun-tracking mode, shown in FIGS. 11-13. First, in the sun-tracking mode,
the sun is already aligned with the symmetric plane of the reflective
parabolic trough, and deviations from alignment are detected. When the
solar concentrator is properly, i.e. optimally, aligned to the sun, both
outer cells 117,119 of the heliostat 116 are equally illuminated, while
the central cell 118 is in the shadow of the back-reflector 113 of the
heat collector 120 (or the shadow of the heat collector itself if a
back-reflector is not used). As the alignment deviates slightly from the
optimal, one of the outer solar cells 117,119 in the heliostat 116 gets a
greater solar exposure, while the opposing cell exposure decreases. These
sensors feed into a control mechanism (not shown) known in the art,
operably connected to the actuating mechanism, e.g. motor 115, for
adjustably rotating the solar concentrator 110 on the support structure
114 to maintain optimal alignment of the concentrator mirror to the
projected direction to the sun. An example of such a system is shown in
FIG. 11. In this figure, the voltage sent to the DC electric motor 115 is
the difference of the voltages across the photodiodes 117 and 119, and is
proportional to the deviation from the aligned position, and has a nearly
linear restoring torque for a certain range of deviations.
[0054] In the sun-searching mode, photo-diodes associated with the two
outer cells 117 and 119 are connected electrically as shown in FIG. 12.
As long as some solar illumination is present, the DC motor 115 produces
a driving torque on the solar concentrator structure. Under the condition
that no shadow falls on any of the photo-diodes, and they are all equally
illuminated, the average voltage of the end photo-diodes (which are
driving the motor) is less than the voltage across the central diode. In
this case, the output of operational amplifier 164 is low, and the
polarity switch is in sun-searching mode. The transition from sun
searching mode to sun tracking mode occurs as the shadow of the axial
heat collector back-reflector falls onto center photo-diode 118. As the
central photo-diode becomes sufficiently shaded, its voltage drops below
the average voltage of the outer two photo-diodes 117 and 119. A circuit
that exploits this drop in the central diode voltage to change the
relative polarity of the diode 117 and 119 connections to the motor 115,
is displayed in FIG. 13. As the central diode 118 becomes sufficiently
shaded, its voltage drops, and the output of the operational amplifier
goes high, thus triggering the sun-tracking mode. Friction of the
mechanical structure serves to damp oscillations about the properly
aligned orientation.
[0055] It is appreciated that sun-searching mode is required at sunrise
once per day, and also each time the aircraft heading becomes very close
to the projected direction to the sun, and the heliostat is not
sufficiently illuminated to maintain sun-tracking. Additionally, the
solar cell sensors are adapted to provide power to directly drive the
axial rotation actuator, i.e. DC motor 115, and no external power source
is required. In this manner, the mass and complexity required for the
heliostat system are greatly reduced.
Heat Collection and Transport Element (Heat Pipe)
[0056] Once the parabolic trough reflector 110 is aligned to the sun,
solar radiance is focused onto the center of a heat collector 120 shown
best in FIGS. 2 and 3 as being located along the focal axis of the
parabolic trough reflector 110 (shown also as the central axis of the
fuselage 103). As shown in FIGS. 3a and 4, the heat collector 120
includes a central heat pipe 129 and a heat collector envelope 122, which
is a transparent vacuum vessel that allows focused sunlight to transmit
to the central heat pipe 129. In a preferred embodiment, the envelope
material is fused silica, by virtue of its high transparency, high
strength, and tolerance to high temperature. The transparent heat
collector envelope 122 is constructed to support a sufficiently high
vacuum in the evacuated space 123 to prevent significant conductive or
convective heat loss from the central heat pipe 129. The heat collector
envelope 122 may have an antireflection coating 121 that decreases the
transmission loss of sunlight to the central heat pipe, and minimizes
radiative heating of the envelope by the hot central heat pipe. As shown
in FIG. 4, both an inner surface and an outer surface of the heat
collector envelope 122 are coated with the antireflection coating 121.
[0057] As shown in FIG. 4, the heat pipe 129 preferably has a triangular
micro-heat pipe structure 129 with a single triangular channel, which
configuration is especially suited for small aircraft applications. For
larger aircraft applications, however, heat pipes having a network of
multiple capillary channels in parallel are preferred. An example of the
multiple capillary channel configuration is shown in FIG. 19,
illustrating a close packed assembly of six parallel channels each having
a triangular cross-section. The heat pipe 129 contains a heat transfer
working fluid that operates to collect solar energy and transport heat to
the heat storage medium and/or heat engine (see FIGS. 5 and 6). The heat
transfer working fluid is preferably sodium, in both liquid phase 127,
shown as a meniscus along the three corners of the triangular heat pipe
structure, and vapor phase 126. Alternatively lithium may be utilized as
the heat transfer working fluid. In any case, the radius of curvature of
the heat pipe working fluid meniscus varies across the length of the heat
acceptance region of the heat collector and produces a pressure drop that
drives vapor from the hot end of the heat pipe, located along the focal
axis of the solar concentrator, to a sodium condenser 128 located inside
the thermal battery 130. A corresponding return flow of liquid sodium
drains from the condenser into the hot section. This drain is primarily
driven by capillary forces, but is also supplemented by gravity in a bend
region 158 of the heat pipe illustrated in FIG. 5 and discussed in
greater detail below.
[0058] The shell 125 of the heat pipe shown in FIG. 4 is preferably
constructed of high strength, high temperature material, such as
stainless steel, with an outer coating 124 that absorbs sunlight very
efficiently, while at the same time having relatively low thermal
emissivity. According to the reference: "Reducing the Cost of Energy from
Parabolic Trough Solar Power Plants: Preprint", by H. Price and D.
Kearney, available from the National Technical Information Service,
report number NREL/CP-550-33208, published in January 2003, and
incorporated herein by reference, an envelope solar transmittance of 96%,
a coating solar absorptance of 94.1%, and a coating thermal emittance of
9.1% have been shown to be practical for solar energy collection systems.
Assuming these values for the optical properties of the collection
element, the efficiency for operation of the heat pipe at 1150 K, near
the boiling point of sodium would be approximately 85% for an equilateral
triangle cross section heat pipe 129 having a base width equal to 0.35%
of the aperture of the concentrator mirror 110.
[0059] With the addition of a highly reflective, semi-circular
back-reflector 113, shown in FIG. 3a, this efficiency increases to
approximately 90%. The back-reflector is positioned adjacent the heat
collector 120 at a side opposite the parabolic trough and preferably
rotatably mounted to the solar concentrator support structure 114
together with the solar concentrator. In the preferred embodiment, the
back-reflector 113 has a semi-circular cross-section that is concentric
to the heat pipe, and thus much of the thermal radiation from the heat
pipe emitted in the direction away from the concentrator mirror is not
lost, but is instead reflected back and refocused onto the heat pipe.
Heat pipes having diameters significantly greater than 0.35% of the
concentrator aperture absorb somewhat more power, but have greater
radiating surface area and are thus less efficient. Heat pipes having
diameters significantly less than 0.35% of the concentrator aperture are
significantly smaller than the projected image of the sun on their
surface, and thus have low collection efficiency. The efficiency of 90%
with the back-reflector 113 represents the fraction of the solar energy
incident on the concentrator mirror that is realized as heat to the hot
side of the heat engine and is available for thermal storage. The solar
collection coating 124 extends only over the portion of the heat pipe
that is illuminated by the solar concentrator. For the interval between
the end of the solar absorption region and the thermal battery, the heat
pipe outer surface is high reflectively material, such as gold. This
reduces the thermal emission from the heat pipe in regions where it is
not designed to be collecting solar energy.
[0060] The fabrication methods for the heat collector 120 are well known
to those skilled in the art of electronic vacuum tube fabrication.
Indeed, the overall structure is similar to a long cylindrical "light
bulb", consisting of a transparent envelope with a central high
temperature "filament", i.e. the heat pipe 129. As is well known in the
art, such vacuum vessels can maintain a vacuum of sufficient quality to
maintain thermal insulation between the filament and the glass envelope
for years. A getter, such as titanium, (not shown) may be deposited on
the inside of the heat collector envelope in the section between the
solar concentrator region and the thermal battery in order to help
maintain the requisite vacuum quality, and yet not degrade the heat
collection efficiency.
Thermal Diode Action of Heat Pipe
[0061] Since the heat transport mechanism in the heat pipe 129 is
predominantly driven by capillary action when sunlit, a gentle bend in
the heat collector 120 may be employed for the convenience of coupling
the heat collector 120 to the thermal battery 130. Moreover, a bend such
as downward sloping bend 158 in FIG. 5 between the thermal battery 130
and the solar concentrator 110, also provides a "thermal diode" action
for the heat pipe. The downward slope in the bend 158 away from the
thermal battery 130 serves as a "drain" for the heat pipe working fluid
during dark periods. Since the heliostat device acts autonomously to
maintain the solar concentrator pointed at the sun whenever sunlight is
available; during sunlit hours the sodium, for example, in the heat pipe
remains active as a heat transfer medium. During periods of extended
darkness, sodium in remote regions of the heat pipe from the thermal
battery 130 will liquefy and then solidify. Liquid sodium will drain out
of the thermal battery 130 by gravity down the bend 158 in the heat pipe
120. Eventually, almost all of the sodium will be frozen in regions of
the heat pipe below the bend region 158. The remaining thermal connection
out of the thermal battery is the thin stainless steel heat pipe shell,
and the thin glass envelope, neither of which have significant thermal
conductivity. In this fashion, the heat pipe acts as a thermal diode to
prevent significant loss of heat from the thermal battery during periods
of extended darkness, as at night, or during extended periods of heavy
cloud cover, while having very high heat transport efficiency during
sunlit periods.
Thermal Battery Container
[0062] As previously mentioned and further shown in FIGS. 6 and 7, the
thermal battery 130 includes (1) a heat storage container comprising
layers 131, 132,133 and (2) a heat storage medium, i.e. thermal battery
core 136 contained in the heat storage container. With respect to the
heat storage container, i.e. thermal battery container, it includes
several layers of thin, highly reflective material 132, separated by
spacers 135, and a highly reflective outer vacuum vessel 131, surround a
containment shell structure 133. As shown in FIG. 9, the containment
shell structure 133 is further comprised of a primary containment shell
137 and a gold layer 139, described in detail below. The layers of highly
reflective material act as radiation shields, and provide thermal
insulation of the hot thermal battery core 136. The spacers 135
separating the multiple layers of reflective material in the preferred
embodiment are simply pointed dimples in the reflective material, having
very little mass, and providing very little thermal contact between
layers. The vessel 131 is evacuated to prevent conductive or convective
degradation of the thermal insulation. A certain quantity of getter
material, such as titanium, (not shown) may be deposited on the interior
of the vacuum vessel 131 in order to maintain sufficiently high vacuum
quality that the thermal insulation quality of the multi-layer insulation
is preserved. As is well known to the person of ordinary skill in the
art, for such a multi-layer insulation structure, designed to have
negligible conductive and convective thermal loss, for a reflective
material having an emissivity of 0.03 (as is typical of goal coatings) in
a total of 15 layers, and an inner temperature of 1200 K, the effective
thermal emissivity is 0.001, and the radiative cooling power loss rate is
approximately only 120 W/m.sup.2.
Thermal Battery Core
[0063] With respect to the heat storage medium, i.e. thermal battery core
136 contained by the thermal battery container, the utility of LiH as a
thermal energy storage medium was previously discussed in the Background,
and is due to the very high thermal energy per unit mass characteristic
of LiH. However, in order to address the problem of lithium-hydride
containment for high temperatures, e.g. 700.degree. C. and above, a small
admixture of lithium is utilized in order to prevent a hydrogen
explosion. Thus the heat storage medium, i.e. the thermal battery core
136, consists of a mixture of lithium hydride and lithium metal, in
equilibrium with various dissociation products 134, including hydrogen
gas and liquid phase lithium and lithium hydride. The most significant
contribution to the total vapor pressure is the partial pressure of
hydrogen. The equilibrium hydrogen pressure is a function of both the
temperature and the fraction of Li in a LiH--Li mixture, as is displayed
in FIG. 17. Theoretically, pure LiH has an infinite hydrogen vapor
pressure just above the melting point of LiH. It is therefore necessary
either to provide a certain small quantity of Li along with the LiH in
the thermal battery core, or to allow some hydrogen to permeate out of
the container prior to final sealing.
[0064] The fabrication of the LiH and Li mixture may be achieved by
starting with an initially pure quantity of LiH in the thermal battery
fabrication process, and after initial hermetic sealing of the LiH in its
primary containment shell 137, consisting of a LiH--Li impervious alloy,
test the quality of the seal by heating the LiH to just below the melting
point. Some possible alloys that are relatively inert to Li are Mo-Z,
Mo--Re, and Nb--Zr, as described in "High Temperature Liquid Metal Heat
Pipes", by A. Bricard, T. Claret, P. Lecocq and T. Alleau, in the
Proceedings of the 7.sup.th International Heat Pipe Conference, (1993),
incorporated by reference herein. In addition, very low carbon steel is
also inert to Li and LiH. According to the reference: "Compatibility of
potential containment materials with molten lithium hydride at
800.degree. C.", by S. J. Pawel, published in the Journal of Nuclear
Materials vol. 207, pp. 136-152, in 1993, also incorporated herein by
reference, "Stabilized (Nb and Ti) low carbon (<0.06%) steels are
observed to be essentially inert in LiH at 800.degree. C. with stable
carbides and no grain growth." The initial "seal test" heating step
causes a significant pressure of hydrogen to build up in the LiH
container. If the seal is bad, a relatively high hydrogen pressure will
be observed. In contrast, if the container is well sealed, a much lower
hydrogen pressure will still be seen outside the container, due only to
hydrogen permeation. After a small quantity of hydrogen has been allowed
to permeate out of the container, the LiH may be slowly raised (in order
to avoid an excessive pressure spike) above the melting point, and
sufficient hydrogen removed by permeation to bring the Li metal fraction
remaining in the core 136 up to a desirable value.
[0065] As an example, by getting to a 2% Li metal mixture, the hydrogen
pressure at a working temperature of 1100 K will be just over one
atmosphere, as can be read from the plot in FIG. 17. Once the desired
LiH--Li mix has been reached, heating may be ended, and the LiH container
allowed to cool. In order to prevent further significant hydrogen
permeation, the inner LiH containment shell is coated with a gold layer
139. The outermost layer of gold 139 provides a permeation barrier to the
evolution of hydrogen. A gold layer of approximately 0.001" is estimated
to yield a hydrogen containment lifetime of over a year. Gold has the
additional advantage of having low thermal emissivity (approximately 3%),
and thus provides for low thermal radiative cooling loss through the
muti-layer thermal insulation.
[0066] Inner cavities inside the thermal battery 130 provide good thermal
contact to both the sodium condenser 128 at the end of the heat pipe 129,
as illustrated in FIG. 6. The external surface of the sodium condenser
128 is primarily cooled by hydrogen "boiling" as the LiH dissociates.
Hydrogen bubbles rise to the vapor space, with some hydrogen-lithium
recombination occurring in the liquid phase 136, and some recombination
occurring in the vapor phase 134, until equilibrium is reached. The
sodium condenser is sufficiently large to assure that the heat flux
through the sodium condenser 128 into the thermal battery is below the
critical heat flux marking the onset of so-called "transition" boiling,
and thus maintains a high heat transfer efficiency.
Heat Engine
[0067] FIG. 16 illustrates a Stirling engine of the beta form, well known
to practitioners in the art of heat engines, which serves as a preferred
embodiment of the heat engine 140. Generally, a crank mechanism 147
converts the reciprocating motion of the Stirling engine to rotary motion
of a propeller by a crankshaft 148, as is well known to those skilled in
the art. The Stirling engine has a hot side and a cold side, represented
by a hot side heat exchanger 142 and a cold side heat exchanger 144,
respectively. The Stirling engine mechanism forces a working fluid, such
as for example air or helium hermetically sealed therein, to cyclically
pass from the expansion space 151 through the hot side heat exchanger
142, the regenerator 143, the cold side heat exchanger 144, the
compression space 153, and back. The working fluid goes through a
pressure cycle that is phased to deliver net power over the course of a
cycle, through the power piston 154 to the crankshaft 148. The phase of
the variation of the compression space volume 153 relative to the
expansion space volume 151 is approximately 90.degree.. The gap 156
around the displacer piston is sufficiently large that only an
insignificant pressure drop is developed between the expansion space 151
and the compression space 153. In contrast, the gap 157 around the power
piston is sufficiently small that almost no working fluid between the
compression space 153 and the crankcase space 155. Still, over many
cycles, sufficient working fluid does flow through the power piston gap
157 that equilibrium is reached between the average pressure in the
compression space 153 and the average pressure in the crankcase space
155.
[0068] As illustrated in FIG. 7, the thermal battery 130 generally and the
heat storage medium in particular, e.g. the LiH/Li mixture, is in thermal
contact with the hot side of the heat engine 140 for supplying heat
thereto from the stored heat transported by the heat collection and
transporting conduit, i.e. heat pipe 120. The hot side heat exchanger 142
is primarily heated by conduction from the hot liquid phase 136 through
the thin container wall 133. Waste heat is removed from the cold side
heat exchanger 144 of the heat engine 140 by forced convective cooling
provided by ambient air flowing in through the inlet channel 108 past a
set of cooling fins 141. Since the air temperature at high altitude is
very low, approximately 220 K between 10 km and 40 km, the cold side of
the heat engine can be held relatively cool, and the resulting Carnot
heat engine efficiency may exceed 70%. Achieving such efficiency is aided
by the design of the air cooling channel 108 shown in FIG. 2. The cool
air forced past the cooling fins 141 may be driven by the airflow past
the aircraft, a forward propeller 109 or a rearward ducted fan 150. As
displayed in FIG. 7, the full length of the hot side heat exchanger 142
lies within the thermal battery core, while the full span of the
regenerator 143 extends across the gap between the thermal battery core
and the outer vacuum vessel wall, and the cold side heat exchanger 144
lies within the range of the cooling fins 141. This arrangement maximizes
the thermal contact to both the hot and cold thermal reservoirs, and
produces a nearly linear temperature gradient across the regenerator.
Stirling Engine Power Modulation
[0069] The power produced by the Stirling engine tends to increase with
the mean pressure in the expansion space 151 inside the engine. Thus,
venting the engine crankcase, through the crankcase pressure relief valve
149 shown in FIG. 7, to the ambient air, for example, serves to decrease
the output power. Correspondingly, increasing the crankcase pressure
serves to increase the output power.
[0070] Pressurization of the crankcase above the ambient atmospheric
pressure is preferably achieved by the action of a crankshaft pump 145
that produces a pumping action as the crankshaft rotates, to
self-pressurize the crankcase. The crankshaft pump 145 comprises at least
one helical groove on either the crankshaft surface or a journal
surrounding the crankshaft. It is appreciated that one or more helical
grooves may be utilized in the same direction for greater pumping
performance. And a filter 146 prevents particulate contamination in the
working fluid from clogging the passageways in the crankshaft pump 145.
[0071] In the preferred embodiment, the crankcase pressurizes to a value
determined by the pressure drop across the crankshaft pump and the
outside atmospheric pressure, for the case that the working fluid is
simply ambient air. This pressure drop is in turn determined by the
design of the grooves, both in terms of the number of grooves, and the
groove shape. The steady state speed of the crankshaft pump is designed
to produce a given mean operating pressure inside the crankcase of the
engine. A pressure drop of one atmosphere across the crankcase pump, for
example, produces an operating pressure that is relatively insensitive to
the operating altitude of the aircraft. At an altitude corresponding to
10% of atmospheric pressure, the engine operating pressure would be
approximately 50% that corresponding to sea level.
[0072] An alternative embodiment is shown in FIG. 20 using helium as the
working fluid in the Stirling engine, includes a closed and sealed
reservoir 160 (the working fluid pressure vessel) serving to contain
helium that is vented from the crankcase pressure relief valve 149, and
return the released helium to the crankshaft pump 145 in a closed cycle
through a filter 146. The pressure of the helium in the sealed chamber is
much less than the engine operating pressure, and thus the outer
crankshaft journal bearing 162 may readily act as a gas tight seal to
prevent significant loss of helium to the ambient air. In another
embodiment, the working fluid may be hydrogen, and in addition, a
hydrogen permeable cap 163 (even high temperature steel will be adequate
to this end under many circumstances) may be used on the hot end of the
Stirling engine. In this case, the slow loss of hydrogen from the thermal
battery core 136 may be balanced by a slow gain from the Stirling engine
hydrogen working fluid through the end cap 163, thereby extending the
hydrogen containment lifetime of the thermal battery to an arbitrary
degree.
Alternative Configurations
[0073] And FIGS. 14, 15, and 18 show alternative arrangements of the solar
thermal power plants for aircraft of various configurations. FIG. 14
illustrates the aircraft 100 having two solar power plants, one on each
wing 102 of the aircraft. In particular, FIG. 14 shows multiple
wing-mounted solar energy collection and storage systems directly coupled
to a corresponding wing-mounted heat engine. Thus each solar power plant
of each wing is self-sustainable and independently operable. FIG. 15
shows a fuselage-mounted solar energy collection and storage system with
a multiplicity of wing mounted propellers driven by a transmission system
107. It is appreciated that the propellers may be arranged to push the
aircraft, as specifically shown in FIG. 15, or alternatively to pull the
aircraft (not shown). And FIG. 18 shows a fuselage-mounted solar energy
collection and storage system with a stern mounted ducted fan propulsion
system 150. As shown, the heat engine 140 and cooling fins 141 in
particular are cooled via an air inlet 108 that also serves to supply
airflow to the ducted fan propulsion system.
[0074] While particular operational sequences, materials, temperatures,
parameters, and particular embodiments have been described and or
illustrated, such are not intended to be limiting. Modifications and
changes may become apparent to those skilled in the art, and it is
intended that the invention be limited only by the scope of the appended
claims.
* * * * *