Definition
The first solar car invented was a tiny 15-inch vehicle
created by William G. Cobb of General Motors. Called the Sun mobile, Cobb
showcased the first solar car at the Chicago Powerama convention on August 31,
1955. The solar car was made up 12 selenium photovoltaic cells and a small Pooley
electric motor turning a pulley which in turn rotated the rear wheel shaft. The
first solar car in history was obviously too small to drive . Now let's jump to
1962 when the first solar car that a person could drive was demonstrated to the
public. The International Rectifier Company converted a vintage model 1912
Baker electric car (pictured above) to run on photovoltaic energy in 1958, but
they didn't show it until 4 years later. Around 10,640 individual solar cells
were mounted to the rooftop of the Baker to help propel it.
In 1977, Alabama University professor Ed Passereni built the
Bluebird solar car, which was a prototype full scale vehicle. The Bluebird was
supposed to move from power created by the photovoltaic cells only without the
use of a battery. The Bluebird was exhibited in the Knoxville, TN 1982 World's
Fair.Between 1977 and 1980 (the exact dates are not known for sure), at Tokyo
Denki University, professor Masaharu Fujita first created a solar bicycle, then
a 4-wheel solar car. The car was actually two solar bicycles put together. In
1979 Englishman Alain Freeman invented a solar car (pictured right). He road
registered the same vehicle in 1980. The Freeman solar car was a 3-wheeler with
a solar panel on the roof.
Energy Flow For A Solar Car
The energy from the sun strikes the earth throughout the
entire day . However, the amount of energy changes due to the time of day,
weather conditions, and geographic location. The amount of available solar
energy is known as the solar isolation and is most commonly measured in watts
per meter squared or W / m 2. In India on a bright sunny day in the early
afternoon the solar isolation will be roughly around 1000 W / m 2, but in the
mornings, evenings, or when the skies are overcast, the solar isolation will
fall towards 0 W / m 2. It must understand how the available isolation changes
in order to capture as much of the available energy as possible.
The sunlight hits the cells of the solar array, which
produces an electrical current. The energy (current) can travel to the
batteries for storage; go directly to the motor controller, or a combination of
both. The energy sent to the controller is used to power the motor that turns
the wheel and makes the car moves.
Generally if the car is in motion, the converted sun light
is delivered directly to the motor controller, but there are times when there
is more energy coming from the may than the motor controller needs. When this
happens, the extra energy gets stored in the batteries for later use.
When the solar may can't produce enough energy to drive the
motor at the desired speed, the array's energy is supplemented with stored
energy from the batteries.
Of course, when the car is not in motion, all the energy
from the solar may is stored in the batteries. There is also a way to get back
some of the energy used to propel the car. When the car is being slowed down,
instead of using the normal mechanical brakes, the motor is turned into a
generator and energy flows backwards through the motor controller and into the
batteries for storage. This is known as regenerative braking. The amount of
energy returned to the batteries is small, but every bit helps.
Application
• This concept can be utilized to build a single
sitter four wheel vehicles in practice.
• It can be extended to more commercial form of four
wheeler vehicle.
• In industry where small vehicles are used to perform
light weight conveys work from one place to other place.
It can be used places where, fuel
based vehicles are banned due to production of pollution and noise.
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