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Engineering students from San José University create solar icemaker |
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Wednesday, 01 October 2008 |
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Students from San José
University have created a solar icemaker that
doesn't use electricity but is capable of creating 14 pounds of ice every
day. Faculty advisor and Associate Professor Jinny Rhee
described: "The solar icemaker uses the heat from the sun to drive a chemical
reaction that separates a liquid refrigerant from a solid absorbent during the
day. The solid absorbent stays in the solar collector, while the liquid
refrigerant is driven away and stored in a separate component called the
evaporator.
At night, the chemical reaction runs in reverse, and the solid
absorbent sucks all of the liquid refrigerant back into the collector; without
pumps, valves, or any mechanical components. In the process, the liquid
refrigerant evaporates and gets very cold and any water touching the outside of
the evaporator is frozen to ice." Although
the solar icemaker is rather large right now in its early stages, these
students are well on their way to develop a more portable version. The project, dubbed Solar Ice, is a finalist in the 2008 California
Clean Tech Open. Winners will be announced in October,
reveals the universitys press release. |