Solution-Chemically Derived Spectrally Selective Solar Absorbers : With System Perspectives on Solar Heating

This thesis consists of two parts, one dominating part concerning spectrally selective solar absorbers and one dealing with thermal solar systems. The appended papers I to VIII concern the solar absorber part, papers dealing with the systems part have not been included in the thesis. A new spectrall...

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Main Author: Boström, Tobias
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för teknikvetenskaper 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-7160
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:91-554-6663-X
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-uu-71602013-01-08T13:04:20ZSolution-Chemically Derived Spectrally Selective Solar Absorbers : With System Perspectives on Solar HeatingengBoström, TobiasUppsala universitet, Institutionen för teknikvetenskaperUppsala : Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis2006Materials sciencesolarthermalabsorberselectivechemicalMaterialvetenskapThis thesis consists of two parts, one dominating part concerning spectrally selective solar absorbers and one dealing with thermal solar systems. The appended papers I to VIII concern the solar absorber part, papers dealing with the systems part have not been included in the thesis. A new spectrally selective absorber derived from a novel solution-chemistry method has been developed and optimized. The main objective was to investigate the potential of the spectrally selective surface. Some of the questions at issue were; would it be possible to create a suitable absorber composite using this method, how high selectivity could be obtained, could the performance be enhanced by using anti-reflection coatings, which was the optimal layer composition, would the thin films be durable and what was the structure and morphology like on a nano scale? The absorber consists of absorbing thin films of nickel nano-particles embedded in a dielectric matrix of alumina and an overlying anti-reflection film consisting of one of the following materials silica, hybrid-silica, alumina or silica-titania. Solution and sol-gel chemistry were used in the process. The thin films were spin-coated onto an aluminum substrate followed by a heat-treatment that generated the multi layer selective solar absorber. The optical constants for the thin film materials in question were determined. An optimal three layer structure was modeled using the experimentally determined optical constants. The theoretical three layer stack was experimentally confirmed and achieved a solar absorptance of 0.97 and a thermal emittance of 0.05 which definitely are commercially competitive values. The configuration of the three layer stack is: an 80%nickel-20%alumina film at the base, a 40%nickel-60%alumina film in the middle and a silica or hybrid-silica film at the top. The three layer absorber was subjected to high temperature and condensation accelerated ageing tests designed by IEA Task 27. The condensation test did not degrade the absorber whatsoever but the high temperature test did reveal some oxidation of the nickel particles. The oxidation occurs initially and then stops. A formed nickel-oxide layer hinders further oxidation. The level of oxidation is small and the absorber is qualified according to the IEA Task 27 test procedure. Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-7160urn:isbn:91-554-6663-XDigital Comprehensive Summaries of Uppsala Dissertations from the Faculty of Science and Technology, 1651-6214 ; 225application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Materials science
solar
thermal
absorber
selective
chemical
Materialvetenskap
spellingShingle Materials science
solar
thermal
absorber
selective
chemical
Materialvetenskap
Boström, Tobias
Solution-Chemically Derived Spectrally Selective Solar Absorbers : With System Perspectives on Solar Heating
description This thesis consists of two parts, one dominating part concerning spectrally selective solar absorbers and one dealing with thermal solar systems. The appended papers I to VIII concern the solar absorber part, papers dealing with the systems part have not been included in the thesis. A new spectrally selective absorber derived from a novel solution-chemistry method has been developed and optimized. The main objective was to investigate the potential of the spectrally selective surface. Some of the questions at issue were; would it be possible to create a suitable absorber composite using this method, how high selectivity could be obtained, could the performance be enhanced by using anti-reflection coatings, which was the optimal layer composition, would the thin films be durable and what was the structure and morphology like on a nano scale? The absorber consists of absorbing thin films of nickel nano-particles embedded in a dielectric matrix of alumina and an overlying anti-reflection film consisting of one of the following materials silica, hybrid-silica, alumina or silica-titania. Solution and sol-gel chemistry were used in the process. The thin films were spin-coated onto an aluminum substrate followed by a heat-treatment that generated the multi layer selective solar absorber. The optical constants for the thin film materials in question were determined. An optimal three layer structure was modeled using the experimentally determined optical constants. The theoretical three layer stack was experimentally confirmed and achieved a solar absorptance of 0.97 and a thermal emittance of 0.05 which definitely are commercially competitive values. The configuration of the three layer stack is: an 80%nickel-20%alumina film at the base, a 40%nickel-60%alumina film in the middle and a silica or hybrid-silica film at the top. The three layer absorber was subjected to high temperature and condensation accelerated ageing tests designed by IEA Task 27. The condensation test did not degrade the absorber whatsoever but the high temperature test did reveal some oxidation of the nickel particles. The oxidation occurs initially and then stops. A formed nickel-oxide layer hinders further oxidation. The level of oxidation is small and the absorber is qualified according to the IEA Task 27 test procedure.
author Boström, Tobias
author_facet Boström, Tobias
author_sort Boström, Tobias
title Solution-Chemically Derived Spectrally Selective Solar Absorbers : With System Perspectives on Solar Heating
title_short Solution-Chemically Derived Spectrally Selective Solar Absorbers : With System Perspectives on Solar Heating
title_full Solution-Chemically Derived Spectrally Selective Solar Absorbers : With System Perspectives on Solar Heating
title_fullStr Solution-Chemically Derived Spectrally Selective Solar Absorbers : With System Perspectives on Solar Heating
title_full_unstemmed Solution-Chemically Derived Spectrally Selective Solar Absorbers : With System Perspectives on Solar Heating
title_sort solution-chemically derived spectrally selective solar absorbers : with system perspectives on solar heating
publisher Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för teknikvetenskaper
publishDate 2006
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-7160
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:91-554-6663-X
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