Martin LaMonica | Jun 12, 2009

Packing heat: a prototype of a solar collector designed to fuel industrial chillers.
(Credit: Chromasun)
Fledgling company
Chromasun plans to put
the sun's heat to work cooling commercial buildings.
Founder Peter Le Lievre established the company to apply concentrating solar
power techniques used in utility-scale power plants on a small scale, he
said on Wednesday.
The potential of applying this technology in dry, sunny areas, such as the
southwest US or southern Europe, to cut peak electricity usage is vast, says
Le Lievre. If used widely, solar-powered cooling could cut peak electricity
usage by about 15 percent, he said.
Le Lievre is scheduled to discuss the solar cooling device, now still in
development, at Greentech Media's Green Building Summit on Thursday where he
will disclose some initial performance data.
Cooling accounts for a huge portion of the peak-time electrical load,
representing about half of the peak electrical load in California. Le Lievre
projects the Chromasun device can cut that consumption by a third and make
dramatic reductions in individual buildings. A LEED-certified green building
could cut its peak electrical load by about 90 percent, he said.
The technology behind Chromasun's solar concentrator box originated at the
Australian National University and is being commercialized by Ausra, the
concentrating solar power company co-founded by Le Lievre.
A concentrating solar system creates heat by focusing light onto a pipe
carrying a liquid, which can be water or oil. Chromasun is using a Fresnel lens
to concentrate the light and make heat. Over the course of a day, the lenses
will follow the sun to maximize the heat.
Normally, chillers create cool air in buildings using a building's boiler.
Chromasun's solar concentrator can replace that heat with solar energy and feed
it to existing air conditioning systems, Le Lievre explained. The system can
also pull in cool air at night and introduce it into the building.
"The payback under rebates available from California and the federal
Government is four to five years. But when you buy a conventional air
conditioning system, it never pays back--you always need to power it," he said.
Le Lievre argued that a solar thermal system will be more efficient than
buying solar electric panels. He said he expects the solar air conditioner can
replace existing equipment, although builder owners need to have a back-up
system.
The company expects to test its systems at an office building in Dubai and a
data center in California early next year, and have a commercial product
available in the second half of next year. The plan is to sell the solar air
conditioner through exiting HVAC distributors.
Chromasun is in the process of seeking a series B round of investment, Le
Lievre said.
Via
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