However, the consortium’s initial efforts to build a first-of-its-kind plant at Redstone in South Africa’s Northern Cape Region collapsed, so it collaborated with Dongfang Boiler Group (DBC), and eventually won a tender in 2016 to build a project at the Hami solar field. As sdp notes, Stellio was especially attractive even then; it won the SolarPACES Technology Innovation Award 2015 and the CSP PLAZA Technology Innovation Award 2017.

Its winning attribute is its pentagonal design, which greatly reduces the subtle but ongoing oscillation from wind load. The design essentially comprises 10 cantilever arms and a central hub, which allows for “a more homogenous stiffness distribution compared to rectangular structures and results in a very efficient structural system, [that is], it provides low deformations and thus high optical performance at low specific weight. Its roundish shape reduces shading and blocking and allows for a compact field layout,” the firm explained.

However, the design is also partly derived from well-proven parabolic trough technology. “The cantilever arm [is] welded from hollow box sections—easy to fabricate and with optimum stiffness per weight.” It also features five rings of purlins that carry the mirrors; the purlins are made from a cost-effective sheet metal. The hub and the parts of the kinematic system are welded from plates.

“The main advantage of the Stellio kinematic system with two inclined axes is that cost-efficient linear actuators can be used for both axes and that tracking errors due to drive backlash are eliminated for [most] heliostat orientations,” sdp added.

The whole structure is then hot dip galvanized to ensure long-term corrosion protection. Finally, it uses 10 mirrors (made from 4-millimeter-thick float glass) as well as a central mirror—which altogether form a 48.5-square-meter reflecting surface. The Hami solar field turned out to be ideally suited to the Stellio design because it features a “slight overall slope” that lends well to a staggered field configuration. The field surrounding the 94-meter-high solar tower can host 14,500 heliostats.

According to SolarPACES, the International Energy Agency’s CSP research arm, how quickly the concept progressed from “lab to commercial” is remarkable. “The biggest obstacle to advancing potential cost-cutting improvements in novel CSP technologies is getting them deployed in commercial projects. Risks are high when every CSP plant must be built at utility-scale and must make money right away,” it noted. However, the project also benefited greatly from being built in China, which as Solar PACES noted, “takes a different approach to new technologies that favors giving novel designs a tryout. Its first CSP projects are demonstration projects, yet they are being built at full size to allow real-life engineering issues to show up so they can be resolved at commercial scale.”

The 50-MW Yumen project in China, for example, is testing a “beam-down” dish CSP, a technology that promises to cut CSP power costs by 30%. “If beam down works, it could greatly simplify solar hydrogen thermochemistry, because a focal point on the ground is conducive to another innovation to cut renewable hydrogen costs by combining the solar receiver/reactor with thermal storage at ground level, where the thermochemistry for splitting water is best carried out,” the organization noted. Another phase of the Yumen project is also testing a silicon-based heat transfer fluid (HTF) for trough CSP in a project spearheaded by Chinese firm Royal Tech CSP, another SolarPACES award winner. That’s notable because “Silicon can get much hotter than today’s 400C standard heat transfer fluid for trough CSP, so this Si-HTF greatly improves the efficiency of parabolic trough CSP,” SolarPACES said.

Sonal Patel is a POWER senior associate editor.