Difference between revisions of "Solar Milk Cooling with Insulated Milk Cans"
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[[Field Testing of an Innovative Solar Powered Milk Cooling Solution for the higher Efficiency of the Dairy Subsector in Tunisia (PA Project)|Field Testing of an Innovative Solar Powered Milk Cooling Solution for the higher Efficiency of the Dairy Subsector in Tunisia]]<br/> | [[Field Testing of an Innovative Solar Powered Milk Cooling Solution for the higher Efficiency of the Dairy Subsector in Tunisia (PA Project)|Field Testing of an Innovative Solar Powered Milk Cooling Solution for the higher Efficiency of the Dairy Subsector in Tunisia]]<br/> | ||
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+ | = Overview of solar milk cooling systems<br/> = | ||
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+ | [[Solar_milk_cooling|solar milk cooling]]<br/> | ||
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+ | [[Category:Photovoltaic_(PV)]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Cooling]] | ||
[[Category:Powering_Agriculture]] | [[Category:Powering_Agriculture]] | ||
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Revision as of 07:11, 2 July 2016
Description
The milk cooling solution developed by the University of Hohenheim is based on a commercially available DC Refrigerator equipped with an adaptive control unit for its conversion to a smart ice-maker that operates depending on the availability of solar energy. The ice-maker has a volume of 160l and is capable of producing approx. 8-13 kg ice per day. One system includes 25 reusable plastic blocks of 2 kg capacity and two 30l isolated milk cans with removable ice compartment. To cool down 30l of milk from 36°C to 15°C in one of the supplied milk cans, the systems needs 6kg of ice and 90 minutes.
The smart ice-maker is powered by 600Wp solar PV modules together with two batteries with a total capacity of around 1.5kWh. Thanks to the thermal energy storage, in form of the 25 2kg-Ice-blocks, the system is able to run autonomously for up to 7 days even during periods of low solar radiation and high ambient temperatures.
Coolaboration partners
University of Hohenheim
Phaesun GmbH
ICARDA
INRAT
GIZ
BMZ
On-field implementations
Overview of solar milk cooling systems