In 1897, Frank Shuman, a U.S. inventor, engineer and solar
energy pioneer built a small demonstration solar engine that worked by
reflecting solar energy onto square boxes filled with ether, which has a lower
boiling point than water, and were fitted internally with black pipes which in
turn powered a steam engine. In 1908 Shuman formed the Sun Power Company with
the intent of building larger solar power plants. He, along with his technical
advisor A.S.E. Ackermann and British physicist Sir Charles Vernon Boys, developed
an improved system using mirrors to reflect solar energy upon collector boxes,
increasing heating capacity to the extent that water could now be used instead
of ether. Shuman then constructed a full-scale steam engine powered by
low-pressure water, enabling him to patent the entire solar engine system by
1912.
Shuman built the world’s first solar thermal power station
in Maadi, Egypt between 1912 and 1913. Shuman’s plant used parabolic troughs to
power a 45-52 kilowatt (60-70 H.P.) engine that pumped more than 22,000 liters
of water per minute from the Nile River to adjacent cotton fields. Although the
outbreak of World War I and the discovery of cheap oil in the 1930s discouraged
the advancement of solar energy, Shuman’s vision and basic design were
resurrected in the 1970s with a new wave of interest in solar thermal energy. In
1916 Shuman was quoted in the media advocating solar energy's utilization.
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