Solar Trough Air Con/Pool Heating System
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| System Flow Chart: Solar Assisted Air Con via Domestic Heat Network |
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| high-efficiency parabola trough-type solar energy collector |
nPress Release:
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- Tokyo, January 5, 2011 — Hitachi Plant Technologies, Ltd. (President and Representative Director: Toshiaki Higashihara) has recently developed an environmentally-friendly Solar Activated Air Conditioning System employing its own developed solar energy collector. The system reduces consumption of fossil fuels and carbon dioxide emissions remarkably.
- Hitachi Plant Technologies is actively expanding its marketing activities, targeting at local-air conditioning in buildings or district cooling facilities for the regions of the Mediterranean, the interior of North America, Western Asia, and Australia, “Sun Shine Belts” which are sufficiently exposed to huge amount of sunlight. The company expects to break in its sales up to 5 billions yen in FY2015.
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nSolar (concentrated thermal) power is increasingly in focus as a source of renewable, sustainable and efficient energy, thus significantly displacing the use of fossil fuels. Hitachi Plant Technologies has considerable experience in a wide range of plants employing solar energy for power and heating. Typical electricity saving with such as system could be as high as 50% dependent of design.
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nWhilst other companies have used solar thermal tubes, or even thermal flat plate type collectors, the use of a “mini-parabolic Trough” is a nice twist. This allows higher operating temperatures to improve energy distribution efficiencies.
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nThe system displaces electrical energy required to do the same ‘work’ in terms of air conditioning. Ideally suited to hot sunny climates where air con electricity loads can be large and cause major grid problems. So in effect the utilities ought to be promoting this too to balance their power demands in the day. Also interesting is the apparent modular design of the ‘Troughs’ so that multiple collectors can be used for larger installations or to balance the energy input needs of a designed air con system with the square ‘meterage/footage/acreage’ of collectors.
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nAll the more strange is that these types of systems are not more common. So what have the air con installers been doing over the years? I guess they thought that air con units were just an ‘electrical device’.









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