SolarPACES Conference Proceedings (Aug 2024)
Variation in Reflected Beam Shape and Pointing Accuracy Over Time and Heliostat Field Position
Abstract
Heliostats are typically constructed with fixed mirror shapes, which they move to varying angles to reflect sunlight onto a receiver. While heliostat facet curvatures and canting angles are selected to maximize a chosen performance criterion, these fixed shapes inevitably cannot maintain focus throughout widely varying solar incidence angles. Further, heliostat pointing accuracy generally exhibits error due to manufacturing and installation imperfections. In this paper we present a systematic study of how reflected beam shape and pointing accuracy vary with heliostat position, time of day, and time of year. We selected nine heliostats spanning the Sandia National Laboratories National Solar Thermal Test Facility (NSTTF) heliostat field, and measured their beam shape and required pointing corrections throughout the day, for six key dates spanning a solar year. We also present ray tracing analysis to aid understanding of the observed effects. The resulting data provide insight into the nature and magnitude of heliostat focus loss at various times, and clarify the nature of the problem faced when attempting to maximize heliostat field performance, especially for high-temperature industrial applications. We conclude that fixed heliostat fields canted with an off-axis strategy will lose significant performance away from the solar noon hour to which they are tuned, and that aim point corrections can vary widely, both between independent heliostats and over time for a given heiostat. This implies that multiple measurements of each heliostat are required to determine calibration pointing corrections.
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