Mike Cleaver wrote:

> At 12:27 18-02-02 +1000, you wrote:
>
> Will it work in reverse at night due to katabatic flow down the chimney?
>

Apparently -yes. But not in this way, see below:

"A SOLAR power plant that generates electricity after sunset
sounds like a contradiction in terms, but the Spanish
experiment showed that the solar chimney has this rare talent.
Radiation passing through the collector heats not only the air
beneath it, but also the ground. This heat is released into the
air in the evening.

As the air cools, the chimney becomes more sensitive to small
rises in temperature. And Schlaich's team found that by
covering the soil with more heat-absorbent materials, they
could make the prototype generate electricity for longer and
longer into the evening. Schlaich now proposes placing coils of
black plastic water-filled tubes under the collector. By pumping
water warmed during the day into an insulated store and then
returning it to the coils at night, he calculates that the plant
could be made to work at full capacity for 24 hours a day.

Another idea tested in Spain was to use the outer portion of the
collector to grow food. Towards the rim, the air temperature is
not too much above ambient and the wind speed not too high.
This also means that people can work beneath much of the
collector while the plant is functioning. Maintenance near the
centre could be more of a problem. In a 100-megawatt plant,
the updraught would be about 15 metres a second (54
kilometres an hour), which is bracing but not overpowering.

The  temperature, however, could reach a staggering 35 �C above
ambient."

--
Leigh Bunting
Colonel Light Gardens
South Australia
<Open Windows and let the bugs in>



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