SELECTIVE SURFACES FOR RADIANT HEAT TRANSFER
20210190383 · 2021-06-24
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02B10/20
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y02E10/40
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F25B23/003
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24S23/70
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
The present invention relates to a heat transfer device or system for the use of moving heat energy, which is generally cooling or heating. The device or system comprising at least one selective surface (1), wherein the selective surface comprises at least one radiant concentrator or lens (5) and at least one conductive material (4) comprising at least one receiver (2). The selective surface exchanges radiant energy with at least one emissive object (7), whereby net heat energy is transferred through radiant energy exchanged between the emissive object and the selective surface.
Claims
1. A heat transfer device comprising at least one selective surface, wherein the selective surface comprises at least one radiant concentrator, and at least one receiver, wherein the receiver(s) comprise one or more surfaces for absorbing and emitting radiant energy; wherein the heat transfer device transfers more radiant heat energy to the receiver(s) than the receiver(s) emit in a range of conditions where a temperature of the receiver(s) are not below a second temperature of one or more emissive objects with which the receiver(s) exchange radiant energy.
2. The invention defined in claim 1, wherein at least one of the one or more radiant concentrators comprises a CPC.
3. The invention defined in claim 2, wherein the CPC is filled with a transparent material.
4. The invention defined in claim 1, wherein the one or more emissive objects do not comprise the sun.
5. The invention defined in claim 1, further comprising an array of the one or more radiant concentrators.
6. The invention defined in claim 1, further comprising a plurality of selective surfaces, wherein the plurality of selective surfaces are layered.
7. The invention defined in claim 1, wherein the heat transfer device comprises an enclosure.
8. The invention defined in claim 7, wherein the heat transfer device comprises an enclosure that moves heat energy from inside the enclosure to outside the enclosure.
9. The invention defined in claim 7, wherein the heat transfer device comprises an enclosure that moves heat energy from outside the enclosure to inside the enclosure.
10. The invention defined in claim 7, wherein the heat transfer device comprises a tube or a pipe, wherein a material flows through the tube or pipe.
11. The invention defined in claim 7, wherein the heat transfer device comprises a panel or a pane.
12. The invention defined in claim 11, wherein a material flows through the panel or pane.
13. (canceled)
14. (canceled)
15. The invention defined in claim 1, wherein the selective surface is selective within a narrow spectral range.
16. A method of transferring net heat energy radiantly to a first heat source from a second heat source through one or more selective surfaces, wherein the first heat source is at the same or higher temperature than the second heat source; the method comprising: a. Concentrating radiant energy with at least one radiant concentrator from one or more emissive objects to at least one receiver; b. Absorbing radiant energy at the one or more receivers; c. Emitting radiant energy from the one or more receivers; wherein the receiver(s) emits less radiative energy than is absorbed from the emissive object(s) for a range of conditions where the temperature of the receiver is not below the temperature of the emissive object(s) with which the receiver exchanges radiant energy.
17. The invention defined in claim 1, wherein the range of conditions comprises a temperature differential between the receiver(s) and the emissive object(s), wherein the temperature differential ranges from zero to a non-zero temperature differential that occurs when there is no net heat energy transferred between the receiver(s) and the emissive object(s).
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] For a better understanding of the embodiments of the invention, as well as additional embodiments thereof, reference should be made to the Description of Embodiments below, in conjunction with the following drawings, in which like reference numerals refer to corresponding parts throughout the figures.
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REFERENCE NUMERALS IN DRAWINGS
[0038] 1 Selective Surface
[0039] 2 High Emissive Surface/Receiver
[0040] 3 Highly Reflective and/or Low Emissive Surface
[0041] 4 Conductive Material
[0042] 5 Lens/Concentrator
[0043] 6 Emissive Surface
[0044] 7 Emissive Object
[0045] 8 Rays of Radiant Energy
[0046] 9 Aperture
[0047] 10 Gap
[0048] 11 Second Selective Surface
[0049] 12 High Emissive Surface/Receiver
[0050] 13 Highly Reflective Surface
[0051] 14 Second Conductive Material/Layer
[0052] 15 Second Lens (Array)
[0053] 16 Second Emissive Surface
[0054] 17 Second Emissive Object
[0055] 18 Second Gap
[0056] 19 Enclosure
[0057] 20 Enclosure First Surface
[0058] 21 Enclosure Second Surface
[0059] 22 End Cap
[0060] 23 Top Surface
[0061] 28 Ray of Radiant Energy
[0062] 30 Flow
[0063] Q(0) Heat Energy Out
[0064] Q(1) Heat Energy In
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0065] Reference will now be made in detail to embodiments and/or methods, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. In the following detailed description, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. However, it will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known and/or common processes, mechanisms, procedures, components, and networks have not been described in detail so as not to unnecessarily obscure aspects of the embodiments.
[0066] It will also be understood that, although the terms first, second, etc. may be used herein to describe various elements, these elements should not be limited by these terms. These terms may only be used to distinguish one element from another. For example, a first surface could be termed a second surface, and, similarly, a second surface could be termed a first surface, without departing from the scope of the present invention.
[0067] The terminology, used in the description of the invention herein, is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only and is not intended to be limiting of the invention. As used in the description of the invention and the appended claims, the singular forms “a”, “an” and “the” are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. It will also be understood that the term “and/or”, as used herein, refers to and encompasses any and all possible combinations of one or more of the associated listed items. It will be further understood that the terms “comprises” and/or “comprising,” when used in this specification, specify the presence of stated features, steps, methods, operations, elements, and/or components, but do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, steps, methods, operations, elements, and/or components thereof.
[0068] Embodiments of a thermal energy transfer system and/or device, and associated processes for using such devices are described. In some embodiments, the invention is for the use of cooling one or more objects, such as a building or refrigerator. In some embodiments, the invention is for the use heating and/or warming one or more objects, such as a building or heating a fluid. In some embodiments the invention does both depending on need and/or season of the year. In other embodiment It should be understood, however, that some of the embodiments may be applied to other devices.
[0069] In the examples about to be disclosed, the embodiments are for the general use of transferring heat energy, such as heating or cooling for example. In an aspect of the invention, the embodiments comprise one or more selective surfaces. A selective surface may be comprised of a plurality of materials, which themselves comprise surfaces. For the purpose of clarity and to define the invention, the term selective surface will comprise a surface that emits radiation energy more or less that it absorbs. The selective surface generally does not emit the same amount of radiation energy as it absorbs.
[0070] In an aspect of the invention, the selective surfaces comprise at least two different materials. In an aspect of some embodiments of the invention, the materials may be the same material but comprise different surface textures, coatings, shapes, or finishes that modify its radiant emittance and/or absorptance. For example, steel or aluminum can be polished, anodized, brushed, or oxidized with greatly modified radiant properties. For another example, a metal sheet can be painted. A metal sheet that is polished will exhibit high reflectivity and low emissivity and low absorption. While that same sheet covered with black paint will have low reflectivity and high emissivity and absorption.
[0071] In an aspect of the invention, surfaces that have consistent radiant properties that make up a selective surface may be called sub-surfaces to avoid confusion and distinctly define the invention. In an aspect of the invention, materials that are substantially transparent to radiant energy in the one or more spectral bands that the selective surfaces are designed to work in will be referred to by the common term “lens”, or “concentrator”. Common lenses are generally for focusing light or imaging. In this disclosure, the lenses are generally for the use of concentrating radiant energy, and not necessarily for imaging. Transparent materials for the use of concentrating radiant energy may also be referred to as concentrators or collectors. For the purposes of defining the invention, transparent materials are any material that are at least 50% transparent for the designed spectral range in which radiant energy is transferred.
[0072] In an aspect, the selective surfaces of this disclosure are generally designed to transfer radiant energy within a spectral range. For example, objects at common room temperature will emit radiation concentrated mostly in the 8 to 25 μm band, which comprises a spectral range. The designed spectral range may overlap between bands, such as between the infrared and visible bands.
[0073] The following embodiments and methods comprise a thermal energy transfer device or system. These devices or systems also comprise a heat pump system. However, common heat pump devices and systems generally require external work or other external energy input to move heat energy. The following embodiments and methods do not require external work or other external energy input to move heat energy.
[0074] In an aspect, the methods and embodiments of the invention transfer heat energy though radiation. Surfaces of materials emit and absorb radiant energy. So, heat energy is transferred between materials, or surfaces of the materials, through radiant energy exchange. However, the methods and embodiments are for the use of moving net heat energy. The term “net” heat energy means that more heat energy is being transferred from a first object to a second object than is being received from the second object to the first. These objects are sometimes referred to as heat sources, as is common.
[0075] Attention is now directed towards embodiments of the device.
[0076]
[0077] The bottom of the lens is in contact with a receiver 2. The receiver can also be referred to as an absorber, as its purpose is to absorb radiant energy. It is beneficial for the receiver to have a surface comprising a highly absorbent material. In an aspect of the invention, the surface of the receiver may be comprised of the same material as the receiver and/or the conductive material 4 below it. Or the receiver may have an emissive surface of a different material or materials. In this example, the bottom of the lens is flat and is shown with a straight line, although it is not limited to being straight/planer. It is preferable that there is no gap between the lens and the highly emissive surface 2. The highly emissive surface comprises the receiver for the lens/CPC concentrator and the lens is in contact with the highly emissive surface. In an aspect, the aperture is also not limited to being flat/planer.
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[0079] In an aspect of the invention, the emissive surface may be comprised of the same material as the emissive object. Or the emissive object may have an emissive surface of a different material or materials. For example, the emissive object may be a material, such as aluminum, that may have a surface treatment to make it more emissive. It is preferable that the emissive surface is highly emissive, as it will emit more radiant energy toward the selective surface than a less emissive material. In an aspect, any surface, including the top surface of the emissive object in
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[0084] In an aspect, the conductive materials and the emissive objects in these figures may be considered heat sources, as heat energy is transferred to or from them. These objects are generally in contact or exposed to an outside environment, which can also be considered as heat sources. Examples, of outside environments are, but not limited to, housings, enclosures, outside air, water, or other materials.
[0085] In an aspect, it is generally preferable for there to be no gap between the receivers and the concentrators in many of the embodiments of this disclosure that have a straight or planer receivers, as seen in these figures. This is due to possibility or rays of radiant energy internally reflecting off of the flat/planer side of the lens/concentrator and not reaching the receiver. However, and in an embodiment, the receiver may have a “V” shape, or conical shape whereby any internal reflection off of one side of the “V” or cone would then exit the other side. With this shape, a gap may be present without adversely affecting performance.
[0086] In an aspect, rays of radiant energy may be partially absorbed by reflecting off of a reflective surface. Whereas rays traveling though a transparent medium, such as the concentrator/lens here, which are below the critical angle would reflect by total internal reflection if there is no reflective material in contact with the sides of the lens. It thus may be desirable to have a gap between the reflective material and the side of the lens. By this method and embodiment, rays below the critical angle will totally internally reflect, and rays above the critical angle will exit the lens, and then be reflected back into the lens by a reflective surface 13 at a gap from the lens, as seen in
[0087] In a method of transferring net heat energy radiantly to a first heat source 1 from a second heat source 7, wherein the first heat source is at the same or higher temperature than the second heat source; the method comprising: [0088] a. Concentrating radiant energy 8 from one or more emissive objects 7 to at least one receiver 2; [0089] b. Absorbing radiant energy at the one or more receivers; [0090] c. Emitting radiant energy from the one or more receivers;
wherein the receiver(s) emit less radiative energy than is absorbed from the emissive object(s) for a range of conditions where the temperature of the receiver is not below the temperature of the emissive object(s) with which the receiver exchanges radiant energy. In an embodiment that utilizes this method, a lens/concentrator 5 concentrates the radiant energy that flows into the lens through the aperture of the lens 9 to the one or more receivers 2. (
MATERIALS
[0091] A preferable material for the lens/concentrator is Potassium Bromide (KBr) for selective surfaces of the present disclosure that operate in the infrared region. Potassium bromide has exceptional transmissibility in the infrared region. It has a refractive index of approximately 1.55. (Due to dispersion, the refractive index varies with wavelength.) Using Snell's Law, the critical angle of infrared radiant energy entering or leaving potassium bromide from an insulative material, such as air, other transparent gases, and/or a partial vacuum, works out to be approximately 42 degrees from a line extend perpendicular to the surface of the lens.
[0092] A list of alternative materials for the lens/concentrator comprises: Calcium Fluoride (CaF2), Fused Silica (FS), Germanium (Ge), Magnesium Fluoride (MgF2), N-BK7, Sapphire, Silicon (Si), Sodium Chloride (NaCl), Zinc Selenide (ZnSe), Zinc Sulfide (ZnS), or any material suitably transparent in the design spectral range. The index of refraction for these materials is generally between 1.4 and 4. Other material may also suffice, for example, semiconductors are generally transparent to infrared wavelengths and they may be utilized.
[0093] Real world materials do not exhibit perfect absorption, emittance, or reflectance. However, materials exist that exhibit very high or low values for these properties. Aluminum, for example, can have an emissivity of 0.04 if highly polished, or 0.77 if anodized. If covered with Parson's black paint, the emissivity may be 0.95. Note: these example numbers are fractions of a blackbody's ideal properties and are not listed to limit the invention.
COMPOUND PARABOLIC CONCENTRATORS
[0094] Compound parabolic concentrators are known devices. (They are sometimes also referred to as “compound parabolic collectors”, or “lens” here.) For this disclosure, they will often be referred to as CPCs, or CPC in the singular. CPCs are non-imaging radiant concentrators that have found common use in solar collectors. CPCs for solar use have reflective inner surfaces and concentrate solar radiant energy to a receiver. These concentrators take advantage of the directional distribution of sunlight, which is mostly in the direction of the sun. Diffuse sunlight generally comprises much less than half of the radiant energy from the sun on a clear day. The majority of radiant energy from the sun comes in one direction. However, when it is cloudy diffuse sunlight reaching the surface of the Earth may comprise a much higher percentage.
[0095] The concentration factor for CPC's is given by the formula C=1/sin Ø, where angle Ø represents the acceptance half-angle. So, if an acceptance half-angle of 42 degrees is chosen, then C=1.49. This means that for radiant energy that enters within the acceptance angle range, the receiver is receiving about 50% more radiant energy than it would otherwise receive without the CPC. This is the ideal case assuming perfect reflectance. With real world materials, some radiant energy is absorbed by the reflective material inside the CPC, if present, and the concentration factor would be reduced.
[0096] In an embodiment, a CPC is filled with a transparent material, or solely comprises a transparent material. In an embodiment, the index of refraction of the transparent material is substantially different from an insulating material, or vacuum, or partial vacuum through which radiant energy comes towards the CPC—providing an index of refraction generally of 1.2 or higher. (For the purposes of defining the invention, a substantially different index of refraction will be defined as greater than 10%.) Provided Potassium bromide is the transparent material (generally transparent for infrared light), infrared radiant energy vectors within the CPC will be refracted upon being transmitted into the transmissible material of the concentrator and will not exceed 42 degrees from a vector perpendicular to the top surface of the transparent material that fills the CPC and pointing towards the receiver of the CPC.
[0097]
[0098] The receiver's length, by contrast, is one divided by the concentration factor C (inverse of C). So, the receiver comprises approximately only 0.67, or two thirds of the length of the top opening and aperture of the CPC in the example shown in
[0099] To consider the complete system, and take into account likely real-world materials, let's assume that the reflective surface 3 reflects 90%, and the receiver 2 and first surface 6 absorb 90%. The first surface here is the emissive surface 6 of the emissive object 4. In this case, the receiver absorbs 90% of the first surface radiation energy. (Note that any energy absorbed in a reflected vector in the CPC lowers the amount of energy absorbed by the receiver of the CPC, but it is still absorbed by the selective surface.) Assuming the area of the first surface is 1 unit, and also the area of the receiver is ⅔ of that 1 unit, then the selective surface is absorbing 50% more radiant energy than it is emitting (1 divided by ⅔, expressed as a percentage increase) minus the radiant energy that the reflective surface is emitting. Considering that the reflective surface 3 emits 10% (100%−the 90% reflectance), the surface is selective if the length of the reflective surface is less than approximately 3.3 times the length of the top surface, which would yield 0.33 (3.3×0.1), if it equaled 3.3. (In this simplified 2D example, area is equivalent to distance.) This is certainly the case, and so the surface is selective.
[0100] In an aspect of the invention, infrared or other radiation from a surface coming toward a selective surface comes from many directions. If a Blackbody is assumed, the directional distribution is even and radiant energy comes from every direction by the same amount. However, this is a bad assumption to make, as real materials generally radiate much less in directions at high angles to a vector perpendicular to the radiating surface. The distribution is not uniform for real world materials. This real-world property is to the benefit of the present invention, as very few radiant vectors either exit the lens/CPC, or need to be reflected to the receiver through a reflective surface.
[0101] In the embodiment above, the acceptance half-angle is greater than the critical angle. The critical angle is the angle at which a vector parallel to the top surface of the CPC would enter into the CPC due to the refraction the transmissible material provides. In an aspect of the invention, real world materials do not have the directional distribution of black bodies. In general, real world materials emit much less radiant energy at high angles to a vector perpendicular to and outward from the emitting surface than they emit at small angles. For this reason, it may be beneficial to design a CPC with a smaller acceptance half-angle and higher concentration factor. In an embodiment, the acceptance half-angle is smaller than the critical angle. In this embodiment, not all radiant energy vectors will reach the receiver. However, the gain in concentration factor may outweigh the loss in lost vectors, particularly if the material radiating energy at the CPC radiates less radiant energy at the angles that do not reach the receiver than at angles that do reach the receiver.
[0102] In an aspect of some embodiments of the invention, it is known that reducing the height of a CPC will reduce its concentration factor. But, reducing the height may only reduce the concentration factor by a small amount, depending on the amount. The reason is that the upper sides of a CPC, which are parabolas, are very steep at the top, and contribute little to the concentration. In an embodiment, the CPC comprises a reduced height parabola.
[0103] In an aspect of the invention, other shapes may be used. While some embodiments may be limited to CPCs, other embodiments may comprise non-parabolic shapes. For example, and in an embodiment, a concentrating collector may comprise sides with straight lines in cross section, or simple curves or arcs. In an aspect of the invention, CPCs comprises the concentrating collector(s), len(s), or concentrator(s) of the invention.
[0104] In an aspect, the concentration ratio and particular dimensions and specifications listed in the above example represent an embodiment, however they were not given to limit the invention to that one embodiment and those specific dimensions and specifications. The above example was chosen to illustrate and disclose both the embodiment and the general theory of operation of the invention.
THREE DIMENSIONS AND ARRAYS
[0105] In an aspect of the invention, the two-dimensional cross-sectional shapes shown
[0106] Further, and in an embodiment, a two-dimensional shape may be revolved into a three-dimensional shape, as illustrated in
[0107] In an aspect of the invention, three-dimensional shapes often have higher concentration ratios. For example, the revolved three-dimensional shape illustrated in
[0108] In an aspect of the invention, it is useful to turn a two-dimensional shape into a three-dimensional shape with an area that is a shape that can be closest packed together into an array or grid of concentrators. Closest packed shapes comprise triangles, squares, rectangles, trapezoids, and hexagons, etc. In an embodiment, the selective surface comprises an array, or hex grid of concentrators, as illustrated in
[0109] There exists two ways to closest pack these shapes. One method, and in an embodiment, the cross-sectional shape from edge to edge is the shape of the two-dimensional shape of
[0110] A second method is where three-dimensional shapes may overlap. In an example and embodiment, revolved circular shapes may overlap to closest pack.
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[0114] An array, or other plurality or singularity of generally transmissible lenses contact a generally conductive surface on which they are in thermal contact. This surface is not limited to a planar surface.
[0115] In an aspect, real world objects generally do not exist in vacuums. Provided the objects illustrated in
[0116]
[0117] These figures also illustrate embodiments comprising at least one selective surface that facilitates transferring heat energy from an outside environment to or from the inside environment. The embodiments of
[0118] In an aspect of the invention, the embodiments and methods of the present invention comprising selective surfaces will transfer net radiant heat energy in a direction from one side to another when the two sides are at the same temperature, or below a temperature differential. If one side warms up, and/or one side cools due to the net heat transfer, net heat transfer will occur until the conditions are met where the heat transfer rate in opposing directions are equal. This may occur when the warmer side is warm enough to emit more radiation, as a warmer body will emit more radiation energy per unit area of radiating material. It may also occur in embodiments where there is a path for heat to conduct or convect in the opposite direction of the net radiant heat energy transfer. In this case, the equilibrium temperature differential is reached when the net radiant energy transfer in the direction of the selective surface from or to another object equals the conduction or convection in the opposite direction. In an aspect, heat can also be transferred though condensation, evaporation, or other common means, and an equilibrium of heat energy transfer may also occur due to these processes.
[0119] In an aspect of the invention, the cross section of these embodiments does not need to be limited to circular cross sections. Other shapes may apply. Also, any number of selective surfaces in series may be used. Two has simply been shown to not unnecessarily complicate the description.
[0120] In an embodiment,
[0121] In
[0122] In
[0123] In an aspect, it is beneficial to have the gaps 10 between the one or more selective surfaces and the one or more emissive objects and surfaces be at an at least partial vacuum to lessen conduction in the opposite direction of the net radiation exchange between the objects. In this case, a tube with a circular cross section is a preferable shape to handle compressive loads on the outer and/or inner walls of the tube caused by the pressure differential of the at least partial vacuum. A tube has an advantage that it does not require columns to support compressive loads along its Z-axis length, although they may be used. Support for the compression loads that a differential of pressure between the outside of the tube, and the one or more gaps, and/or the inside of the tubes can be handled at the end of the tube at one or more end caps.
[0124]
[0125] In an aspect, the end caps may comprise selective surfaces of the present invention, or may not. Provided the end caps do not comprise at least one selective surface, the end cap may be made of an insulative material to limit the conduct heat transfer that may be in the opposite direction of the desired radiant heat transfer that the selective surfaces provide. The direction is in respect in the in and out of the enclosure.
[0126]
[0127] In an aspect, these pipes and tubes are not limited to being straight. Further, they are not limited to a circular cross section.
[0128] Further, and in an embodiment and method, selective surfaces may be layered and used in series that comprise generally flat plates stacked up, or other shapes.
[0129] In an aspect, when selective surfaces are used in a series or layers, the equilibrium temperatures between an environment on one side of the series and the environments on the other side of the series will increase with each added layer. The total heat rate transferred through the levels, however, may be limited to lowest common denominator. More levels do not necessarily move more total heat energy per unit of time. An advantage lies in maintaining a higher temperature differential between the two heat sources, and the total heat energy transferred may be increased in certain embodiments and/or conditions.
[0130] In an aspect, if the outside environment is an ambient environment, representing a heat source of constant temperature, and the inside environment is a limited amount of material at a starting temperature, radiant heat energy will be transferred between the inside and outside environments until a temperature differential is reached wherein the amount of radiant heat being transferred in equals the heat transferred out. Considering that one or more selective surfaces within an enclosure generally need to be supported, and that there is generally at least one conduction path, the conduction often transfers heat energy in the opposite direction of the radiant heat energy transfer in the present embodiments and methods of the invention. Thus, it is preferable to minimize any conduction paths.
[0131]
[0132] In an aspect, the top surface may be exposed to the sky. In embodiments, the top surface may be a common selective surface that is selective between visible light and infrared. For example, and in an embodiment, the top surface 23 may be highly absorbent to visible light from the sun, and less absorbent and emissive in the infrared spectrum to best transfer heat into the selective surface(s) illustrated in
[0133]
[0134]
[0135] In an aspect, it is preferable for the inside of the enclosure of a panel to have a vacuum or partial vacuum separating the layers and elements to minimize conduction in the opposite direction from the direction of desirable radian heat transfer. In an embodiment, as illustrated in
[0136] In an aspect, and similar to architecture, use of arches can minimize the number of columns needed, and/or increase the spacing of columns for a given structural strength.
[0137]
[0138] For the purposes of clarity in understanding the invention in the illustrations,
USES
[0139] The present selective surfaces and the embodiments enclosing them have a wide variety of uses, as they can move heat energy in the opposite direction of simple conduction. Obvious uses are the replacement of insulation. For example, an ice chest could comprise a box with at least one of its six sides replaced by a selective surface comprising a panel comprising one or more selective surfaces. The same is true for a refrigerator.
[0140] Other uses comprise using panels or tubes through which a fluid, or other material, is passed to cool or heat the material. That material can then be used to cool or heat another object, such as a building, industrial process, domestic process, or heat storage device such as a TES, which may then in turn transfer heat energy with a building, industrial or domestic process. A TES may comprise PCM. Likewise, these embodiments and methods may be used to transfer heat energy for purposes, such as, but not limited to, warming or cooling transportation devices, or warming or cooling swimming pools, or transferring heat to hot water heaters or preheaters.
[0141] Another use, and in an embodiment and method, one or more panels comprising selective surface(s) of the present invention may be offset from a ceiling, floor, or wall to move heat within a space, such as a room. For example, and in a method of use, if a panel comprising selective surface(s) is hung from the ceiling above a bed, the panel could be oriented to move heat energy toward the ceiling and away from a person sleeping in the bed. The heat gradient of the room could be increased with the air near the ceiling being warmer than it otherwise would be without the panel. The person sleeping in the bed could then be in a cooler temperature, even though the average temperature in the room stayed the same, as no energy would be entering or leaving the room as a whole due to the panel. This would reduce the need for A/C or other cooling methods in places where the temperature in the room would otherwise be too warm for comfortable heating. Further, the underside of the panel would be cooler than the ceiling would otherwise be without the panel, and the underside of the panel would absorb some net radiant energy further cooling the sleeping person. In an aspect, if the panel is oriented in the opposite direction, the panel could be used to provide a warmer environment to the sleeping person. In a method, one or more panels may be flipped over to switch between uses.
[0142] The present embodiments and methods are generally for the use of heating and cooling. These uses may be steps to a further use. For example, heat energy could be used to aid in evaporation of water, and cooling could be use to aid in condensing water. Both of these steps could be used for distilling water and/or desalination.
[0143] In an aspect and embodiment or method, existing common selective surfaces may comprise a top surface with the selective surfaces of the present invention comprising one or more lower layers. Existing selective surface are useful for exchanging radiant heat energy with the sun and/or sky, and the selective surfaces of the present invention can complement this functionality by increasing the overall temperature differential between two heat sources. Thus, the selective surfaces of the present invention may also be used for the same uses as existing selective surfaces. In another aspect, the top or bottom surfaces of an enclosure comprising the selective surfaces of the present invention may comprise surfaces and/or materials with high reflectivity or high absorption for the use of avoiding or adding to radiant heat gain of the outside surfaces.
[0144] These examples are, of course, some of many uses, and the invention should not be limited to these example uses.
Summary, Ramifications, and Scope
[0145] The embodiments, methods, examples, and aspects of the embodiments and invention are disclosed herein to summarize the invention and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention.
[0146] The present disclosure generally relates to using radiant energy to transfer heat energy from a first source to a second source wherein external work input is not required. Net radiant energy may be transferred or moved in some embodiments within a spectral range of radiation.
[0147] The disclosed invention eliminates the problems associated with other methods of moving heat energy, which generally require work input, and/or external energy input. It is an object of some embodiments of the invention to transfer heat energy from a cooler first source to a relatively warmer second source wherein external work input is not required.
[0148] Further, some of the embodiments of the invention disclose methods and embodiments comprising placing the selective surfaces of the present disclosure into enclosures, such as tubes, pipes, and panels. In some embodiments, this enables the cooling or warming of a material that flows through an inner passage of the enclosure.
[0149] The disclosure of the present invention as well as any references to preferred embodiments and other embodiments, are not for limiting the scope of the invention. Persons having ordinary skill in the art may make various modifications and changes without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. Therefore, the scope of the appended claims should not be limited to the description of the embodiments described above. Accordingly, the scope should be determined not by the embodiments illustrated, but by the claims and their legal equivalents.