Salt Gradient Solar Ponds And Their Applications In The Mining Industry - Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Michael Edesess
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
7
File Size:
491 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1981

Abstract

The salt gradient solar pond has been the focal point of accelerating international attention and interest in recent months. Only recently have most investigators in the renewable energy field come to realize the versatility of the solar pond, and its ability to overcome certain problems usually associated with solar technologies. These realizations, together with clear demonstrations in Israel and elsewhere of its technical feasibility, have combined to bring the solar pond to the forefront of renewable energy technologies. The solar pond is a natural or site-built pond, about one to five meters or more in depth, which has been altered to retard the loss of absorbed solar energy. The absorbed solar energy is usually lost through upward buoyancy of the warmed water, followed by the loss of its heat to the atmosphere. The chief solar pond technology -the salt gradient, or "nonconvective" solar pond-prevents this upward buoyancy by means of a vertical density gradient achieved with dissolved salt. The deep waters in the solar pond reach high temperatures, up to and even above the boiling point of pure water.
Citation

APA: Michael Edesess  (1981)  Salt Gradient Solar Ponds And Their Applications In The Mining Industry - Introduction

MLA: Michael Edesess Salt Gradient Solar Ponds And Their Applications In The Mining Industry - Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1981.

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