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Hybrid Solar-Wind Energy Technology Produces 435 to 1250 Megawatt-Hours/Hour

June 20, 2014
The Solar Wind Downdraft Tower is the first hybrid solar-wind renewable energy technology in the market.

The Solar Wind Downdraft Tower is the first hybrid solar-wind renewable energy technology in the market. The patented structure (see figure) comprises a tall hollow cylinder with a water injection system near the top and wind tunnels containing turbines near the bottom.

To start, a series of pumps deliver water to the Tower’s injection system at the top where a fine mist is cast across the entire opening. The water introduced by the injection system then evaporates and is absorbed by hot dry air which has been heated by the solar rays of the sun.  As a result, the air becomes cooler, denser and heavier than the outside warmer air, and falls through the cylinder at speeds up to and in excess of 50 mph. This air is then diverted into wind tunnels surrounding the base of the Tower where turbines inside the tunnels power generators to produce electricity.

In geographic areas where atmospheric conditions are conducive, the exterior of the Tower may be constructed with vertical “wind vanes” that capture the prevailing wind and channel it to produce supplemental electrical power. This dual renewable energy resource greatly enhances its clean energy-producing capability and productivity.

The Solar Wind Energy Inc. (Annapolis, MD) Tower is unique in that it does not have any operational limitations in terms of time. It’s capable of operating around the clock, 24 hours per day, and seven days per week. Whereas there are operational limitations with solar collectors that work only when the sun shines, and with wind turbines that work only when the wind blows. 

It also has the ability to be operated with virtually no carbon footprint, fuel consumption, or waste production. It generates clean, cost effective and efficient electrical power without damaging effects.

Proprietary Global Energy Generation Calculator

To complement its renewable energy technology and aid in its expansion efforts, Solar Wind Energy  developed a proprietary software based analyticalprogram to determine the energy generation capabilities of its Towers based on the climate in geographic locations around the world, and has taken the appropriate steps to protect its intellectual property invention. This essential tool applies “known” scientific meteorology data of a specific area to the Tower’s variables in order to determine and project energy outputs on a daily basis. Advancements in the scientific community over the last decade make it possible to predict and pin-point specific weather conditions and have provided significant insights into the tool’s development process and direction.

Solar Wind Energy’s Tower produces its own wind that is directed to turbines at its base.

Solar Wind Energy’s analytical tool, combined with its proprietary technology and existing core patents, provide it with a unique opportunity to plan and target the global positioning of its Towers to help meet the world’s energy needs. Solar Wind Energy can now rapidly respond to a request from virtually any country reasonably suitable to host a project and determine specifically where the Tower should be located, the size of it and the amount of electricity it can produce.

Abundant, Clean, Economical Energy Production

Through consistent innovation, the Company has successfully managed to economize the Tower, reducing capital costs while enhancing projected financial performance. This development was made possible by utilizing its Global Energy Generation Calculator software which can calculate and predict energy production of the Towers given a projected location and incorporating that locations’ local weather data. By feeding weather data of its future site location into the program, the Tower’s height and diameter can be adjusted along with the amount of water required as fuel to create a desired amount of energy. The outcome dictates the optimum size of each Tower.

Under the most recent design specifications, the Tower designed for a site near San Luis, Arizona, has a gross production capacity on an hourly basis, of up to 1,250 megawatt-hours. Due to lower capacities during winter days, the average hourly output per day for sale to the grid for the entire year averages approximately 435 megawatt-hours/hr.

Each Tower will be constructed on location using conventional materials, equipment and techniques, associated industries, as well as local workers in the surrounding town or city. Each location will benefit significantly from the creation of professional manufacturing, construction and transportation jobs, in addition to having a high efficiency energy resource close by – providing clean renewable energy at a cost more favorable than nuclear plants with no negative impacts to the environment.

The Company has filed numerous patent applications with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to protect its intellectual property.  The Company has been awarded two patents, and currently has two other patent applications which have been designated with a “Notice of Allowance” and is awaiting issuance of the actual patent documents. The Company has judiciously pursued the patent applications that it feels are instrumental to the core development of its technology and project.

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Patents

Patent #8120191 issued 2/21/2012 “Efficient Energy Conversion Devices & Methods

Covers a novel hydraulic system capable of maintaining high efficiency hydraulic to electric conversion under a wide variance of wind speeds, as coupled to a plurality of wind turbines in wind tunnels.

Patent #8,517,662B2 issued 8/27/2013 “Atmospheric Energy Extraction Devices & Methods

Covers a structure for producing electricity, specifically a Tower capable of adding moisture at the top of the structure to hot-dry air so as to generate a downdraft of wind within the interior of the Tower, vanes coupled to the exterior of the Tower that at least partially define a plurality of elongated pockets to the exterior of the Tower, and flaps located to redirect the incident wind downwards into tunnels to convert wind to electricity.

Patent Application #13/027,409 date of Notice of Allowance 9/23/2013 (to be issued) enhances and broadens previously issued Patent #8120191

Patent Application # 13/947,625 date of Notice of Allowance 1/27/2014 (to be issued) targeted to represent the advantages of the new Tower structural shape, the configuration of the Tower walls, their composition as well as the wall thicknesses for a given height, along with more efficient construction methodology and enhanced wind force resistance over prior Tower designs.

About the Author

Sam Davis Blog | Editor-In-Chief - Power Electronics

Sam Davis was the editor-in-chief of Power Electronics Technology magazine and website that is now part of Electronic Design. He has 18 years experience in electronic engineering design and management, six years in public relations and 25 years as a trade press editor. He holds a BSEE from Case-Western Reserve University, and did graduate work at the same school and UCLA. Sam was the editor for PCIM, the predecessor to Power Electronics Technology, from 1984 to 2004. His engineering experience includes circuit and system design for Litton Systems, Bunker-Ramo, Rocketdyne, and Clevite Corporation.. Design tasks included analog circuits, display systems, power supplies, underwater ordnance systems, and test systems. He also served as a program manager for a Litton Systems Navy program.

Sam is the author of Computer Data Displays, a book published by Prentice-Hall in the U.S. and Japan in 1969. He is also a recipient of the Jesse Neal Award for trade press editorial excellence, and has one patent for naval ship construction that simplifies electronic system integration.

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