Monday, September 26, 2011

The Solar Street Light Saves the Energy from Wind and Solar Power

       If you still don’t know what solar street light is, you are definitely out of date! In recent year, people start to reconsider the use of energy. Since the dominant energy source, oil, has become more and more expensive, for the storage reduce continuously, engineers and scientists begin to search other substitute energy source. Other than that, experts warn that our earth has been polluted seriously by human beings. Therefore, the green energy should be value more than any other time. Solar energy, one of the substitute energy, is eco-friendly and without any pollution. It can generate power just by sun light.

       Solar energy is not available at night, making energy storage an important issue in order to provide the continuous availability of energy. Both wind power and solar power are intermittent energy sources, meaning that all available output must be taken when it is available and either stored for when it can be used, or transported, over transmission lines, to where it can be used. Wind power and solar power tend to be somewhat complementary, as there tends to be more wind in the winter and more sun in the summer, but on days with no sun and no wind the difference needs to be made up in some manner. That’s the basic concept of how solar street light operate, using both wind power and solar power to generate electric. The Institute for Solar Energy Supply Technology of the University of Kassel pilot-tested a combined power plant linking solar, wind, biogas and hydrostorage to provide load-following power around the clock, entirely from renewable sources.

       Daylighting systems collect and distribute sunlight to provide interior illumination. This passive technology directly offsets energy use by replacing artificial lighting, and indirectly offsets non-solar energy use by reducing the need for air-conditioning. Although difficult to quantify, the use of natural lighting also offers physiological and psychological benefits compared to artificial lighting. Daylighting design implies careful selection of window types, sizes and orientation; exterior shading devices may be considered as well. Individual features include sawtooth roofs, clerestory windows, light shelves, skylights and light tubes. The solar outdoor lighting may be incorporated into existing structures, but are most effective when integrated into a solar design package that accounts for factors such as glare, heat flux and time-of-use. When daylighting features are properly implemented they can reduce lighting-related energy requirements by 25%.

 

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