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Detalhes Referência

Tipo
Artigos em Conferência

Tipo de Documento
Resumo

Título
Solar thermal energy between nano and nature

Participantes na publicação
Salomé I. Vieira (Author)
Dep. Química e Bioquímica
Maria José Lourenço (Author)
Dep. Química e Bioquímica
CQE
Carlos Nieto de Castro (Author)
Dep. Química e Bioquímica
CQE
Joerg Mueller (Author)

Resumo
About 90% of the investment made in energy efficiency until 2035 (≈ € 5.3 billion) will be for the transport and construction sectors, to adapt the infrastructures to future needs. Europe, North America and China will be the regions whose markets have higher expression in these sectors and where most of the investment will be [1]. Renewable energies have a great significance in this scenario. Factors such as energy import, geographic and energy sources diversification influence the organization of industry and private consumers. The challenge of implementation of renewable energy in buildings, transport and industry network isn’t mainly in its technical difficulty, but primarily on the change of mentality by institutions, business models, finance, professional practices, education and policies adopted.\nBetween the renewables, solar thermal is one of the most versatile, reliable and flexible energies. Solar radiation is converted into heat and can be used for a wide range of temperatures (45-4000°C) [2]. To increase its efficiency at low cost, paint coatings can be used as spectrally selective surfaces that will increase the amount of UV-Vis radiation absorbed and as protection against corrosion, chemical attacks, etc. To comply with the environmental policies to decrease the amount of VOC’s, waterborne paints are heavily recommended. The pigments used in paints provide color, hiding power and influence properties such as durability, resistance to abrasion and corrosion. They are also responsible for radiation absorbance of materials. In this work we used synthetic and natural alternatives: carbon nanotubes and berries of an invasive plant (Phytolacca americana) which is naturalized almost worldwide.\nWe used a ceramic panel prototype instead of the materials commonly present in solar collectors (metals, polymers, glass, etc). The commercial solar collectors have some impediments to their wider acceptance: high cost (materials and manufacturing), lifetime < 20 years, uncertainty of metal prices, and obtaining good thermal and mechanical bonds between different materials. A ceramic panel would allow an equipment that can challenge all these obstacles, with the drawback of obtaining thermal conductivities comparable to copper and aluminum.

Editor
Professor Yuji Nagasaka

Data de Publicação
2016-10-03

Instituição
FACULDADE DE CIÊNCIAS DA UNIVERSIDADE DE LISBOA

Evento
ATPC 2016, 2-6 October, 2016

Identificadores da Publicação

Organizadores
Keio University, Japan

Editora
Keio University, Japan

Coleção
Abstract Book

Edição
2016
Volume
1

Número de Páginas
196
Página Inicial
116
Página Final
116

Identificadores do Documento
URL - http://www.atpc2016.org/program/pdf/OS11-01.pdf

Keywords
Solar thermal energy Spectral absorption Phytolacca americana Prototype


Exportar referência

APA
Salomé I. Vieira, Maria José Lourenço, Carlos Nieto de Castro, Joerg Mueller, (2016). Solar thermal energy between nano and nature. ATPC 2016, 2-6 October, 2016, 116-116

IEEE
Salomé I. Vieira, Maria José Lourenço, Carlos Nieto de Castro, Joerg Mueller, "Solar thermal energy between nano and nature" in ATPC 2016, 2-6 October, 2016, , 2016, pp. 116-116, doi:

BIBTEX
@InProceedings{41261, author = {Salomé I. Vieira and Maria José Lourenço and Carlos Nieto de Castro and Joerg Mueller}, title = {Solar thermal energy between nano and nature}, booktitle = {ATPC 2016, 2-6 October, 2016}, year = 2016, pages = {116-116}, address = {}, publisher = {Keio University, Japan} }