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Search Results (4,219)

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Keywords = solar–thermal

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32 pages, 2962 KiB  
Article
Optimizing Passive Thermal Enhancement via Embedded Fins: A Multi-Parametric Study of Natural Convection in Square Cavities
by Saleh A. Bawazeer
Energies 2025, 18(15), 4098; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18154098 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
Internal fins are commonly utilized as a passive technique to enhance natural convection, but their efficiency depends on complex interplay between fin design, material properties, and convective strength. This study presents an extensive numerical analysis of buoyancy-driven flow in square cavities containing a [...] Read more.
Internal fins are commonly utilized as a passive technique to enhance natural convection, but their efficiency depends on complex interplay between fin design, material properties, and convective strength. This study presents an extensive numerical analysis of buoyancy-driven flow in square cavities containing a single horizontal fin on the hot wall. Over 9000 simulations were conducted, methodically varying the Rayleigh number (Ra = 10 to 105), Prandtl number (Pr = 0.1 to 10), and fin characteristics, such as length, vertical position, thickness, and the thermal conductivity ratio (up to 1000), to assess their overall impact on thermal efficiency. Thermal enhancements compared to scenarios without fins are quantified using local and average Nusselt numbers, as well as a Nusselt number ratio (NNR). The results reveal that, contrary to conventional beliefs, long fins positioned centrally can actually decrease heat transfer by up to 11.8% at high Ra and Pr due to the disruption of thermal plumes and diminished circulation. Conversely, shorter fins located near the cavity’s top and bottom wall edges can enhance the Nusselt numbers for the hot wall by up to 8.4%, thereby positively affecting the development of thermal boundary layers. A U-shaped Nusselt number distribution related to fin placement appears at Ra ≥ 103, where edge-aligned fins consistently outperform those positioned mid-height. The benefits of high-conductivity fins become increasingly nonlinear at larger Ra, with advantages limited to designs that minimally disrupt core convective patterns. These findings challenge established notions regarding passive thermal enhancement and provide a predictive thermogeometric framework for designing enclosures. The results can be directly applied to passive cooling systems in electronics, battery packs, solar thermal collectors, and energy-efficient buildings, where optimizing heat transfer is vital without employing active control methods. Full article
13 pages, 1057 KiB  
Article
Osmotic Pretreatment and Solar Drying of Eggplant in Tunisian Rural Areas: Assessing the Impact of Process Efficiency and Product Quality
by Sarra Jribi, Ismahen Essaidi, Ines Ben Rejeb, Raouia Ghanem, Mahmoud Elies Hamza and Faten Khamassi
Processes 2025, 13(8), 2442; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13082442 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
The drying process plays a crucial role in enhancing the shelf life of food products by reducing moisture content. As climate change contributes to rising temperatures, alternative drying methods, such as solar drying, offer promising solutions for sustainable food preservation. This study investigates [...] Read more.
The drying process plays a crucial role in enhancing the shelf life of food products by reducing moisture content. As climate change contributes to rising temperatures, alternative drying methods, such as solar drying, offer promising solutions for sustainable food preservation. This study investigates the solar drying of eggplant (Solanum melongena L.) slices, with a focus on the effect of salting pretreatment on drying efficiency. Eggplant slices were subjected to salting pretreatment for partial moisture removal prior to drying. Drying kinetics were monitored to construct the characteristic drying curve. The dried eggplant slices were evaluated for their proximate composition and rehydration capacity, as well as textural and thermal properties. The results showed that salting pretreatment significantly enhanced the solar drying process by accelerating moisture removal. Notably, water activity (aw) decreased significantly from 0.978 to 0.554 for the control sample and to 0.534 for the saltedsample. Significant differences were observed between the dried and salted dried slices, particularly in rehydration capacity, which decreased following salting. Additionally, the salted dried samples showedreductions in protein, carbohydrate, and potassium contents. In contrast, ash content and hardness increased as a result ofosmotic pretreatment. These findings suggest that while dry salting pretreatment effectively reduces solar drying time, it may adversely affect several nutritional and textural properties. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Food Process Engineering)
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26 pages, 7374 KiB  
Article
Copper-Enhanced NiMo/TiO2 Catalysts for Bifunctional Green Hydrogen Production and Pharmaceutical Pollutant Removal
by Nicolás Alejandro Sacco, Fernanda Albana Marchesini, Ilaria Gamba and Gonzalo García
Catalysts 2025, 15(8), 737; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal15080737 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
This study presents the development of Cu-doped NiMo/TiO2 photoelectrocatalysts for simultaneous green hydrogen production and pharmaceutical pollutant removal under simulated solar irradiation. The catalysts were synthesized via wet impregnation (15 wt.% total metal loading with 0.6 wt.% Cu) and thermally treated at [...] Read more.
This study presents the development of Cu-doped NiMo/TiO2 photoelectrocatalysts for simultaneous green hydrogen production and pharmaceutical pollutant removal under simulated solar irradiation. The catalysts were synthesized via wet impregnation (15 wt.% total metal loading with 0.6 wt.% Cu) and thermally treated at 400 °C and 900 °C to investigate structural transformations and catalytic performance. Comprehensive characterization (XRD, BET, SEM, XPS) revealed phase transitions, enhanced crystallinity, and redistribution of redox states upon Cu incorporation, particularly the formation of NiTiO3 and an increase in oxygen vacancies. Crystallite sizes for anatase, rutile, and brookite ranged from 21 to 47 nm at NiMoCu400, while NiMoCu900 exhibited only the rutile phase with 55 nm crystallites. BET analysis showed a surface area of 44.4 m2·g−1 for NiMoCu400, and electrochemical measurements confirmed its higher electrochemically active surface area (ECSA, 2.4 cm2), indicating enhanced surface accessibility. In contrast, NiMoCu900 exhibited a much lower BET surface area (1.4 m2·g−1) and ECSA (1.4 cm2), consistent with its inferior photoelectrocatalytic performance. Compared to previously reported binary NiMo/TiO2 systems, the ternary NiMoCu/TiO2 catalysts demonstrated significantly improved hydrogen production activity and more efficient photoelectrochemical degradation of paracetamol. Specifically, NiMoCu400 showed an anodic peak current of 0.24 mA·cm−2 for paracetamol oxidation, representing a 60% increase over NiMo400 and a cathodic current of –0.46 mA·cm−2 at –0.1 V vs. RHE under illumination, nearly six times higher than the undoped counterpart (–0.08 mA·cm−2). Mott–Schottky analysis further revealed that NiMoCu400 retained n-type behavior, while NiMoCu900 exhibited an unusual inversion to p-type, likely due to Cu migration and rutile-phase-induced realignment of donor states. Despite its higher photosensitivity, NiMoCu900 showed negligible photocurrent, confirming that structural preservation and surface redox activity are critical for photoelectrochemical performance. This work provides mechanistic insight into Cu-mediated photoelectrocatalysis and identifies NiMoCu/TiO2 as a promising bifunctional platform for integrated solar-driven water treatment and sustainable hydrogen production. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Electrocatalysis)
17 pages, 1522 KiB  
Article
Characterization of Solid Particulates to Be Used as Storage as Well as Heat Transfer Medium in Concentrated Solar Power Systems
by Rageh Saeed, Syed Noman Danish, Shaker Alaqel, Nader S. Saleh, Eldwin Djajadiwinata, Hany Al-Ansary, Abdelrahman El-Leathy, Abdulelah Alswaiyd, Zeyad Al-Suhaibani, Zeyad Almutairi and Sheldon Jeter
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(15), 8566; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15158566 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
Using solid particulates as a heat transfer medium for concentrated solar power (CSP) systems has many advantages, positioning them as a superior option compared with conventional heat transfer media such as steam, oil, air, and molten salt. However, a critical imperative lies in [...] Read more.
Using solid particulates as a heat transfer medium for concentrated solar power (CSP) systems has many advantages, positioning them as a superior option compared with conventional heat transfer media such as steam, oil, air, and molten salt. However, a critical imperative lies in the comprehensive evaluation of the properties of potential solid particulates intended for utilization under such extreme thermal conditions. This paper undertakes an exhaustive examination of both ambient and high-temperature thermophysical properties of four naturally occurring particulate materials, Riyadh white sand, Riyadh red sand, Saudi olivine sand, and US olivine sand, and one well-known engineered particulate material. The parameters under scrutiny encompass loose bulk density, tapped bulk density, real density, sintering temperature, and thermal conductivity. The results reveal that the theoretical density decreases with the increase in temperature. The bulk density of solid particulates depends strongly on the particulate size distribution, as well as on the compaction. The tapped bulk density was found to be larger than the loose density for all particulates, as expected. The sintering test proved that Riyadh white sand is sintered at the highest temperature and pressure, 1300 °C and 50 MPa, respectively. US olivine sand was solidified at 800 °C and melted at higher temperatures. This proves that US olivine sand is not suitable to be used as a thermal energy storage and heat transfer medium in high-temperature particle-based CSP systems. The experimental results of thermal diffusivity/conductivity reveal that, for all particulates, both properties decrease with the increase in temperature, and results up to 475.5 °C are reported. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Applied Thermal Engineering)
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20 pages, 16348 KiB  
Article
The Recent Extinction of the Carihuairazo Volcano Glacier in the Ecuadorian Andes Using Multivariate Analysis Techniques
by Pedro Vicente Vaca-Cárdenas, Eduardo Antonio Muñoz-Jácome, Maritza Lucia Vaca-Cárdenas, Diego Francisco Cushquicullma-Colcha and José Guerrero-Casado
Earth 2025, 6(3), 86; https://doi.org/10.3390/earth6030086 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
Climate change has accelerated the retreat of Andean glaciers, with significant recent losses in the tropical Andes. This study evaluates the extinction of the Carihuairazo volcano glacier (Ecuador), quantifying its area from 1312.5 m2 in September 2023 to 101.2 m2 in [...] Read more.
Climate change has accelerated the retreat of Andean glaciers, with significant recent losses in the tropical Andes. This study evaluates the extinction of the Carihuairazo volcano glacier (Ecuador), quantifying its area from 1312.5 m2 in September 2023 to 101.2 m2 in January 2024, its thickness (from 2.5 m to 0.71 m), and its volume (from 2638.85 m3 to 457.18 m3), before its complete deglaciation in February 2024; this rapid melting and its small size classify it as a glacierette. Multivariate analyses (PCA and biclustering) were performed to correlate climatic variables (temperature, solar radiation, precipitation, relative humidity, vapor pressure, and wind) with glacier surface and thickness. The PCA explained 70.26% of the total variance, with Axis 1 (28.01%) associated with extreme thermal conditions (temperatures up to 8.18 °C and radiation up to 16.14 kJ m−2 day−1), which probably drove its disappearance. Likewise, Axis 2 (21.56%) was related to favorable hydric conditions (precipitation between 39 and 94 mm) during the initial phase of glacier monitoring. Biclustering identified three groups of variables: Group 1 (temperature, solar radiation, and vapor pressure) contributed most to deglaciation; Group 2 (precipitation, humidity) apparently benefited initial stability; and Group 3 (wind) played a secondary role. These results, validated through in situ measurements, provide scientific evidence of the disappearance of the Carihuairazo volcano glacier by February 2024. They also corroborate earlier projections that anticipated its extinction by the middle of this decade. The early disappearance of this glacier highlights the vulnerability of small tropical Andean glaciers and underscores the urgent need for water security strategies focused on management, adaptation, and resilience. Full article
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18 pages, 1583 KiB  
Article
Heat Transfer Characteristics of Thermosyphons Used in Vacuum Water Heaters
by Zied Lataoui, Adel M. Benselama and Abdelmajid Jemni
Fluids 2025, 10(8), 199; https://doi.org/10.3390/fluids10080199 - 31 Jul 2025
Abstract
A two-phase closed thermosyphon (TPCT), a gravity-assisted heat pipe, is a highly efficient heat transmitter involving liquid–vapor phase change. It is used in many applications, including heat spreading, thermal management and control, and energy saving. The main objective of this study is to [...] Read more.
A two-phase closed thermosyphon (TPCT), a gravity-assisted heat pipe, is a highly efficient heat transmitter involving liquid–vapor phase change. It is used in many applications, including heat spreading, thermal management and control, and energy saving. The main objective of this study is to investigate the effects of the operating conditions for a thermosyphon used in solar water heaters. The study particularly focuses on the influence of the inclination angle. Thus, a comprehensive simulation model is developed using the volume of fluid (VOF) approach. Complex and related phenomena, including two-phase flow, phase change, and heat exchange, are taken into account. To implement the model, an open-source CFD toolbox based on finite volume formulation, OpenFOAM, is used. The model is then validated by comparing numerical results to the experimental data from the literature. The obtained results show that the simulation model is reliable for investigating the effects of various operating conditions on the transient and steady-state behavior of the thermosyphon. In fact, bubble creation, growth, and advection can be tracked correctly in the liquid pool at the evaporator. The effects of the designed operating conditions on the heat transfer parameters are also discussed. In particular, the optimal tilt angle is shown to be 60° for the intermediate saturation temperature (<50 °C) and 90° for the larger saturation temperature (>60 °C). Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Convective Flows and Heat Transfer)
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14 pages, 2075 KiB  
Article
Quantifying Polar Mesospheric Clouds Thermal Impact on Mesopause
by Arseniy Sokolov, Elena Savenkova, Andrey Koval, Nikolai Gavrilov, Karina Kravtsova, Kseniia Didenko and Tatiana Ermakova
Atmosphere 2025, 16(8), 922; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos16080922 - 30 Jul 2025
Abstract
The article is focused on the quantitative assessment of the thermal impact of polar mesospheric clouds (PMCs) on the mesopause caused by the emission of absorbed solar and terrestrial infrared (IR) radiation by cloud particles. For this purpose, a parameterization of mesopause heating [...] Read more.
The article is focused on the quantitative assessment of the thermal impact of polar mesospheric clouds (PMCs) on the mesopause caused by the emission of absorbed solar and terrestrial infrared (IR) radiation by cloud particles. For this purpose, a parameterization of mesopause heating by PMC crystals has been developed, the main feature of which is to incorporate the thermal properties of ice and the interaction of cloud particles with the environment. Parametrization is based on PMCs zero-dimensional (0-D) model and uses temperature, pressure, and water vapor data in the 80–90 km altitude range retrieved from Solar Occultation for Ice Experiment (SOFIE) measurements. The calculations are made for 14 PMC seasons in both hemispheres with the summer solstice as the central date. The obtained results show that PMCs can make a significant contribution to the heat balance of the upper atmosphere, comparable to the heating caused, for example, by the dissipation of atmospheric gravity waves (GWs). The interhemispheric differences in heating are manifested mainly in the altitude structure: in the Southern Hemisphere (SH), the area of maximum heating values is 1–2 km higher than in the Northern Hemisphere (NH), while quantitatively they are of the same order. The most intensive heating is observed at the lower boundary of the minimum temperature layer (below 150 K) and gradually weakens with altitude. The NH heating median value is 5.86 K/day, while in the SH it is 5.24 K/day. The lowest values of heating are located above the maximum of cloud ice concentration in both hemispheres. The calculated heating rates are also examined in the context of the various factors of temperature variation in the observed atmospheric layers. It is shown in particular that the thermal impact of PMC is commensurate with the influence of dissipating gravity waves at heights of the mesosphere and lower thermosphere (MLT), which parameterizations are included in all modern numerical models of atmospheric circulation. Hence, the developed parameterization can be used in global atmospheric circulation models for further study of the peculiarities of the thermodynamic regime of the MLT. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Observations and Analysis of Upper Atmosphere (2nd Edition))
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16 pages, 3079 KiB  
Article
Optimized Solar-Powered Evaporative-Cooled UFAD System for Sustainable Thermal Comfort: A Case Study in Riyadh, KSA
by Mohamad Kanaan, Semaan Amine and Mohamed Hmadi
Thermo 2025, 5(3), 26; https://doi.org/10.3390/thermo5030026 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 44
Abstract
Evaporative cooling (EC) offers an energy-efficient alternative to direct expansion (DX) cooling but suffers from high water consumption. This limitation can be mitigated by pre-cooling incoming fresh air using cooler exhaust air via energy recovery. This study presents and optimizes a solar-driven EC [...] Read more.
Evaporative cooling (EC) offers an energy-efficient alternative to direct expansion (DX) cooling but suffers from high water consumption. This limitation can be mitigated by pre-cooling incoming fresh air using cooler exhaust air via energy recovery. This study presents and optimizes a solar-driven EC system integrated with underfloor air distribution (UFAD) to enhance thermal comfort and minimize water use in a temporary office in Riyadh’s arid climate. A 3D CFD model was developed and validated against published data to simulate indoor airflow, providing data for thermal comfort evaluation using the predicted mean vote model in cases with and without energy recovery. A year-round hourly energy analysis revealed that the solar-driven EC-UFAD system reduces grid power consumption by 93.5% compared to DX-based UFAD under identical conditions. Energy recovery further cuts annual EC water usage by up to 31.3%. Operational costs decreased by 84% without recovery and 87% with recovery versus DX-UFAD. Full article
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10 pages, 1309 KiB  
Proceeding Paper
A Sustainable Approach to Cooking: Design and Evaluation of a Sun-Tracking Concentrated Solar Stove
by Hasan Ali Khan, Malik Hassan Nawaz, Main Omair Gul and Mazhar Javed
Mater. Proc. 2025, 23(1), 4; https://doi.org/10.3390/materproc2025023004 - 29 Jul 2025
Abstract
Access to clean cooking remains a major challenge in rural and off-grid areas where traditional fuels are costly, harmful, or scarce. Solar cooking offers a sustainable solution, but many existing systems suffer from fixed positioning and low efficiency. This study presents a low-cost, [...] Read more.
Access to clean cooking remains a major challenge in rural and off-grid areas where traditional fuels are costly, harmful, or scarce. Solar cooking offers a sustainable solution, but many existing systems suffer from fixed positioning and low efficiency. This study presents a low-cost, dual-axis solar tracking parabolic dish cooker designed for such regions, featuring adjustable pot holder height and portability for ease of use. The system uses an Arduino UNO, LDR sensors, and a DC gear motor to automate sun tracking, ensuring optimal alignment throughout the day. A 0.61 m parabolic dish with ≥97% reflective silver-coated mirrors concentrates sunlight to temperatures exceeding 300 °C. Performance tests in April, June, and November showed boiling times as low as 3.37 min in high-irradiance conditions (7.66 kWh/m2/day) and 6.63 min under lower-irradiance conditions (3.86 kWh/m2/day). Compared to fixed or single-axis systems, this design achieved higher thermal efficiency and reliability, even under partially cloudy skies. Built with locally available materials, the system offers an affordable, clean, and effective cooking solution that supports energy access, health, and sustainability in underserved communities. Full article
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13 pages, 2134 KiB  
Article
Optimising Tubular Solar Still Performance with Gamma Aluminium Nanocoatings: Experimental Insights on Yield, Efficiency, and Economic Viability
by Ajay Kumar Kaviti, Niharika Mudavath and Vineet Singh Sikarwar
Processes 2025, 13(8), 2413; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13082413 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 205
Abstract
This study evaluates the performance of tubular solar stills coated with gamma aluminium nanocoatings at concentrations of 5%, 10%, and 15%, compared to a conventional tubular solar still. This is the first experimental study to apply gamma aluminium nanocoatings on tubular solar stills [...] Read more.
This study evaluates the performance of tubular solar stills coated with gamma aluminium nanocoatings at concentrations of 5%, 10%, and 15%, compared to a conventional tubular solar still. This is the first experimental study to apply gamma aluminium nanocoatings on tubular solar stills (TSS). The stills were tested for three days, from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., under consistent conditions with varying water depths of 1 cm, 2 cm, and 3 cm. The results indicated that the 5% nanocoating achieved the highest water yield, producing 2.571 L/m2 with a 1 cm water depth. The 10% coating produced 2.514 L/m2, while the conventional solar still generated 2.286 L/m2. Thermal efficiency was highest on Day 1 for the 5% concentration, reaching 60.9%, followed by 10% concentration at 59.1%, while the 15% concentration showed the lowest efficiency at 33.8%. In terms of cost-effectiveness, the 5% concentration was the most economical, with the lowest cost per litre (CPL) of USD 0.10 and a payback period of 3.03 months. The 10% concentration had a CPL of USD 0.11 and a payback period of 3.33 months, while the 15% concentration had the highest CPL at USD 0.19 and the longest payback period of 5.63 months. Overall, the 5% concentration offered the best balance of water yield, efficiency, and cost-effectiveness. This research highlights γ-Al2O3 as an innovative, cost-effective material for solar distillation, paving the way for sustainable freshwater production. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Chemical Processes and Systems)
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23 pages, 5813 KiB  
Article
Integrated Lighting and Solar Shading Strategies for Energy Efficiency, Daylighting and User Comfort in a Library Design Proposal
by Egemen Kaymaz and Banu Manav
Buildings 2025, 15(15), 2669; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15152669 - 28 Jul 2025
Viewed by 128
Abstract
This research proposes an integrated lighting and solar shading strategy to improve energy efficiency and user comfort in a retrofit project in a temperate-humid climate. The study examines a future library addition to an existing faculty building in Bursa, featuring highly glazed façades [...] Read more.
This research proposes an integrated lighting and solar shading strategy to improve energy efficiency and user comfort in a retrofit project in a temperate-humid climate. The study examines a future library addition to an existing faculty building in Bursa, featuring highly glazed façades (77% southwest, 81% northeast window-to-wall ratio), an open-plan layout, and situated within an unobstructed low-rise campus environment. Trade-offs between daylight availability, heating, cooling, lighting energy use, and visual and thermal comfort are evaluated through integrated lighting (DIALux Evo), climate-based daylight (CBDM), and energy simulations (DesignBuilder, EnergyPlus, Radiance). Fifteen solar shading configurations—including brise soleil, overhangs, side fins, egg crates, and louvres—are evaluated alongside a daylight-responsive LED lighting system that meets BS EN 12464-1:2021. Compared to the reference case’s unshaded glazing, optimal design significantly improves building performance: a brise soleil with 0.4 m slats at 30° reduces annual primary energy use by 28.3% and operational carbon emissions by 29.1% and maintains thermal comfort per ASHRAE 55:2023 Category II (±0.7 PMV; PPD < 15%). Daylight performance achieves 91.5% UDI and 2.1% aSE, with integrated photovoltaics offsetting 129.7 kWh/m2 of grid energy. This integrated strategy elevates the building’s energy class under national benchmarks while addressing glare and overheating in the original design. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Lighting in Buildings—2nd Edition)
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20 pages, 1979 KiB  
Article
Energy Storage Configuration Optimization of a Wind–Solar–Thermal Complementary Energy System, Considering Source-Load Uncertainty
by Guangxiu Yu, Ping Zhou, Zhenzhong Zhao, Yiheng Liang and Weijun Wang
Energies 2025, 18(15), 4011; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18154011 - 28 Jul 2025
Viewed by 244
Abstract
The large-scale integration of new energy is an inevitable trend to achieve the low-carbon transformation of power systems. However, the strong randomness of wind power, photovoltaic power, and loads poses severe challenges to the safe and stable operation of systems. Existing studies demonstrate [...] Read more.
The large-scale integration of new energy is an inevitable trend to achieve the low-carbon transformation of power systems. However, the strong randomness of wind power, photovoltaic power, and loads poses severe challenges to the safe and stable operation of systems. Existing studies demonstrate insufficient integration and handling of source-load bilateral uncertainties in wind–solar–fossil fuel storage complementary systems, resulting in difficulties in balancing economy and low-carbon performance in their energy storage configuration. To address this insufficiency, this study proposes an optimal energy storage configuration method considering source-load uncertainties. Firstly, a deterministic bi-level model is constructed: the upper level aims to minimize the comprehensive cost of the system to determine the energy storage capacity and power, and the lower level aims to minimize the system operation cost to solve the optimal scheduling scheme. Then, wind and solar output, as well as loads, are treated as fuzzy variables based on fuzzy chance constraints, and uncertainty constraints are transformed using clear equivalence class processing to establish a bi-level optimization model that considers uncertainties. A differential evolution algorithm and CPLEX are used for solving the upper and lower levels, respectively. Simulation verification in a certain region shows that the proposed method reduces comprehensive cost by 8.9%, operation cost by 10.3%, the curtailment rate of wind and solar energy by 8.92%, and carbon emissions by 3.51%, which significantly improves the economy and low-carbon performance of the system and provides a reference for the future planning and operation of energy systems. Full article
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17 pages, 2996 KiB  
Article
Two Novel Low-Bandgap Copolymers Based on Indacenodithiophene/Indacenodithienothiophene and Benzothiadiazole Dicarboxylic Imide: Structural Design and DFT/TD-DFT Investigation
by Bakhet A. Alqurashy, Ary R. Murad, Wael H. Alsaedi, Bader M. Altayeb, Shaaban A. Elroby and Abdesslem Jedidi
Polymers 2025, 17(15), 2050; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17152050 - 27 Jul 2025
Viewed by 285
Abstract
In the present study, two novel donor–acceptor (D–A) conjugated copolymers, PIDTBDI and PIDTTBDI, were successfully synthesized via Stille coupling polymerization. These alternating copolymers incorporate indacenodithiophene and indacenodithienothiophene as donor units, coupled with benzothiadiazole dicarboxylic imide as the electron-deficient acceptor unit. The influence of [...] Read more.
In the present study, two novel donor–acceptor (D–A) conjugated copolymers, PIDTBDI and PIDTTBDI, were successfully synthesized via Stille coupling polymerization. These alternating copolymers incorporate indacenodithiophene and indacenodithienothiophene as donor units, coupled with benzothiadiazole dicarboxylic imide as the electron-deficient acceptor unit. The influence of extended conjugation on the structural, optical, thermal, and electrochemical properties of the copolymers was systematically investigated and confirmed by density functional theory (DFT). XRD analysis confirmed that both polymers are amorphous. Thermogravimetric analysis revealed that both materials possess excellent thermal stability, with decomposition temperatures exceeding 270 °C. The theoretical and experimental values of the energy gap confirmed the thermal stability of the studied polymers. The molecular weight was determined to be 10,673 Da for PIDTBDI and 7149 Da for PIDTTBDI. Despite the variation in molecular weight, both copolymers exhibited comparable optical and electrochemical bandgaps of approximately 1.57 and 1.69 eV, respectively. Electrochemical measurements showed that PIDTBDI has a HOMO energy level of −5.30 eV and a LUMO level of −3.61 eV, while PIDTTBDI displays HOMO and LUMO levels of −5.28 eV and −3.59 eV, respectively. These results indicate that minor structural differences can considerably affect the electronic characteristics of the polymers, thus altering their overall efficacy in solar cell applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Polymer Materials: Synthesis, Structure, and Properties)
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20 pages, 10028 KiB  
Article
The Fabrication of Cu2O-u/g-C3N4 Heterojunction and Its Application in CO2 Photoreduction
by Jiawei Lu, Yupeng Zhang, Fengxu Xiao, Zhikai Liu, Youran Li, Guiyang Shi and Hao Zhang
Catalysts 2025, 15(8), 715; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal15080715 - 27 Jul 2025
Viewed by 323
Abstract
Over efficient photocatalysts, CO2 photoreduction typically converts CO2 into low-carbon chemicals, which serve as raw materials for downstream synthesis processes. Here, an efficient composite photocatalyst heterojunction (Cu2O-u/g-C3N4) has been fabricated to reduce CO2. [...] Read more.
Over efficient photocatalysts, CO2 photoreduction typically converts CO2 into low-carbon chemicals, which serve as raw materials for downstream synthesis processes. Here, an efficient composite photocatalyst heterojunction (Cu2O-u/g-C3N4) has been fabricated to reduce CO2. Graphitic carbon nitride (g-C3N4) was synthesized via thermal polymerization of urea at 550 °C, while pre-dispersed Cu2O derived from urea pyrolysis (Cu2O-u) was prepared by thermal reduction of urea and CuCl2·2H2O at 180 °C. The heterojunction Cu2O-u/g-C3N4 was subsequently constructed through hydrothermal treatment at 180 °C. This heterojunction exhibited a bandgap of 2.10 eV, with dual optical absorption edges at 485 nm and above 800 nm, enabling efficient harvesting of solar light. Under 175 W mercury lamp irradiation, the heterojunction catalyzed liquid-phase CO2 photoreduction to formic acid, acetic acid, and methanol. Its formic acid production activity surpassed that of pristine g-C3N4 by 3.14-fold and TiO2 by 8.72-fold. Reaction media, hole scavengers, and reaction duration modulated product selectivity. In acetonitrile/isopropanol systems, formic acid and acetic acid production reached 579.4 and 582.8 μmol·h−1·gcat−1. Conversely, in water/triethanolamine systems, methanol production reached 3061.6 μmol·h−1·gcat−1, with 94.79% of the initial conversion retained after three cycles. Finally, this work ends with the conclusions of the CO2 photocatalytic reduction to formic acid, acetic acid, and methanol, and recommends prospects for future research. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Photocatalysis)
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25 pages, 4237 KiB  
Article
Cost-Effective Thermal Mass Walls for Solar Greenhouses in Gobi Desert Regions
by Xiaodan Zhang, Jianming Xie, Ning Ma, Youlin Chang, Jing Zhang and Jing Li
Agriculture 2025, 15(15), 1618; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15151618 - 25 Jul 2025
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Abstract
Gobi solar greenhouses (GSGs) enhance energy, food, and financial security in Gobi Desert regions through passive solar utilization. Thermal mass walls are critical for plant thermal comfort in GSGs but can lead to resource waste if poorly designed. This study pioneers the integration [...] Read more.
Gobi solar greenhouses (GSGs) enhance energy, food, and financial security in Gobi Desert regions through passive solar utilization. Thermal mass walls are critical for plant thermal comfort in GSGs but can lead to resource waste if poorly designed. This study pioneers the integration of payback period constrains into thermal mass wall optimization, establishing a new performance–cost trade-off approach for GSG wall design, balancing thermal performance and economic feasibility. We quantified energy-conserving benefits against wall-construction costs to derive the optimal inner-layer thicknesses under <25% GSG lifespan payback criteria. Three GSG thermal mass walls in China’s Hexi Corridor were optimized. For the concrete-layered, stone-layered, and pebble-soil walls, the optimum inner-layer thicknesses were 0.47, 0.65, and 1.24 m, respectively, with extra costs of 620.75, 767.60, and 194.56 RMB yuan; annual energy-conserving benefits of 82.77, 102.35, and 51.88 RMB yuan·yr−1; and payback periods of 7.5, 7.5, and 3.75 years. A dynamic thermal load analysis confirmed that GSGs with optimized walls required no heating during a sunny winter solstice night. Cooling loads of 33.15–35.27 kW further indicated the potential to maintain thermal comfort under colder weather conditions. This approach improves plant thermal comfort cost-effectively, advancing sustainable Gobi agriculture. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Technology)
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