12
Jan
Sunflowers Inspire Solar Efficiency
Researchers at MIT, in collaboration with RWTH Aachen University in Germany, have come up with a design that reduces the amount of land required to build a CSP (solar power) plant, while increasing the amount of sunlight its mirrors collect. The researchers found that by rearranging the mirrors, or heliostats, in a pattern similar to the spirals on the face of a sunflower, they could reduce the pattern’s ‘footprint’ by 20 percent and increase its potential energy generation. The sunflower-inspired pattern allows for a more compact layout, and minimizes heliostat shading and blocking by neighboring mirrors.
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You should check out this series of videos for a brilliant explanation of why plants tend to show Fibonacci numbers in...
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I’m a big fan of biomimicry. I believe the patterns we see in nature are there for a reason. Mostly because they work.
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This was featured in #Science
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