Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumClean Energy From Nothing but Cool Night Air
When frost forms on the ground overnight even when temperatures are well above freezing, or water droplets appear on car windshields even on a clear night, the cause is often a phenomenon called radiative sky cooling.
In a paper published in the journal Joule, researchers led by a UCLA materials scientist report that they have leveraged the principles behind radiative sky cooling to develop an innovative way to produce renewable energy at night.
The approach could be adapted into a low-cost technology that could eventually be a boon for the more than 1 billion people around the world who, according to the International Energy Agency, lack reliable access to electricity. The concept could be used as a standalone technology or work in combination with solar energy to produce electricity throughout the day and night.
Radiative sky cooling is a natural phenomenon in which a surface that faces the sky ejects its heat into the air as thermal radiation. Some of that heat eventually rises to the upper atmosphere and then into colder reaches of space.
This effect occurs naturally all the time, especially on clear nights, said Aaswath Raman, an assistant professor of materials science and engineering at the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering who led the study. The result is that the object ejecting the heat, whether its a car, the ground or a building, will be slightly cooler than the ambient temperature.
The new technology takes advantage of that difference in temperatures by capturing some of the heat from the surrounding air that would otherwise rise into the sky and converting it into electricity.
Read more: https://www.technologynetworks.com/applied-sciences/news/clean-energy-from-nothing-but-cool-night-air-323938
The technology could eventually aid the more than 1 billion people around the world who lack reliable access to electricity. Credit: UCLA Samueli School of Engineering.
Stonepounder
(4,033 posts)Throck
(2,520 posts)I understand how it works under clear skies but does it work under cloudy skies?
caraher
(6,276 posts)The "cold" side would not likely get cold enough relative to the hot side to generate a usable thermoelectric potential difference.
OldBaldy1701E
(4,963 posts)too bad some major corporation is going to either buy up the rights and shelve it, or start a campaign to try and discredit the thought. Folks, these days there is no reason why houses do not create their own electricity. This is the 21st century. We DO have the technology to do this. Yet, nothing is said about it. How can they milk you out of everything you own if you are self sufficient?