Metadata
Title
A device for concentration of electromagnetic radiation
Category
general
UUID
d8c54de989164505bfba847f33f41661
Source URL
https://research.anu.edu.au/partner-with-us/technology-marketplace/a-device-for-...
Parent URL
https://research.anu.edu.au/partner-with-us/innovation-marketplace
Crawl Time
2026-03-11T01:29:23+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

A device for concentration of electromagnetic radiation

Source: https://research.anu.edu.au/partner-with-us/technology-marketplace/a-device-for-concentration-of-electromagnetic-radiation Parent: https://research.anu.edu.au/partner-with-us/innovation-marketplace

Social implications of disruptive technologies

Physical sciences

Heliostats concentrate solar radiation reflecting from curved mirror panels spread over a large area of land into a central thermal receiver to provide carbon-free, high-temperature energy which can be used as heat for industrial processes and/or to generate power. Mirror panels need to maintain a highly accurate focus onto the receiver under operational loads from gravity and strong wind conditions to achieve efficient low-cost energy output.

Researchers at The Australian National University (ANU) have developed and prototyped a novel mirror panel support structure that offers a simple, robust and lightweight, and customisable design alternative to current hub-spoke solutions. This backing support structure for heliostat mirror panels increases optical accuracy and decreases material requirements.

Technology (TT2021-005)

The novel panel design improves the optical performance of the mirrors under operational wind and gravity loads, reduces material costs from an optimised design, can be produced accurately at high volumes and low cost using standard sheet forming methods, and is applicable for use in both single and multi-facet heliostats and dishes. Several prototypes have been produced and installed in the field for testing.  

Figure 1: Relationship between optical quality of heliostat (slope mirror) and levelised cost of energy (LCOE)

Potential benefits

Potential applications

Opportunity

ANU is seeking industry interest in the technology for collaborative R&D in return for option/license. Specifically, ANU is looking for funding opportunities to support technology assessment around manufacturability of the panels.

IP status

The IP is owned by The Australian National University, and is subject to a provisional patent filing

Key research team

Viraj Agnihotri

viraj.agnihotri@anu.edu.au

+61 401 229 124