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    Combining Mariculture and Seawater-Based Solar Ponds

    Source: Journal of Solar Energy Engineering:;1990:;volume( 112 ):;issue: 002::page 90
    Author:
    Preston Lowrey
    ,
    Richard Ford
    ,
    Francisco Collado
    ,
    Jane Morgan
    ,
    Edward Frusti
    DOI: 10.1115/1.2929652
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: Solar ponds have been thoroughly studied as a means to produce electricity or heat, but there may be comparable potential to use solar ponds to produce optimized environments for the cultivation of some aquaculture crops. For this, conventional brine-based solar ponds could be used. This strategy would probably be most suitable at desert sites where concentrated brine was abundant, pond liners might not be needed, and the crop produced could be shipped to market. Generally, a heat exchanger would be required to transfer heat from the solar pond into the culture ponds. Culture ponds could therefore use either fresh or marine water. In contrast, this paper explores what we name seawater-based solar ponds. These are solar ponds which use seawater in the bottom storage zone and fresh water in the upper convective zone. Because the required temperature elevations for mariculture are only about 10°C, seawater-based solar ponds are conceivable. Seawater-based ponds should be very inexpensive because, by the shore, salt costs would be negligible and a liner might be unnecessary. An initial paper described the design and preliminary experience with two 16 m2 seawater-based solar ponds adapted for mariculture during the winter of 1986-1987 (reference [1]). Subsystems designed for air injection, salt gradient maintenance, filtering to remove ammonia, feeding, and maintenance of water clarity were detailed. Typical temperature and salinity gradients and month-long temperature elevation performance were also presented. This paper presents follow-up experimental results. During Jan. and Feb. 1986, operation of the two seawater-based solar ponds with no cultivation in them produced sustained bottom temperatures averaging 25.5°C. During this period, the ambient air averaged 13.8°C and the overnight low averaged 8.9°C. Elevation of seawater to 20–28°C would be extremely useful for winter mariculture along the entire southern coastline of the United States. In contrast, during the winter of 1987–1988 formal growth comparison experiments were conducted with striped bass, (Morone saxatilis ), growing within two replicate solar ponds and within two replicate, conventional, control ponds. Over six winter months the solar pond bottom temperatures averaged 6°C warmer than the ambient air. Fish weights in the solar ponds increased by a cumulative average of 1105 percent compared with 172 percent for fish in the control ponds. These results are in line with other studies of the influence of temperature on the growth rate of striped bass. Management of the solar ponds involved a simple daily routine. These two experiments, therefore, demonstrate the profound potential of combining suitably designed seawater-based solar ponds with mariculture in winter to raise water temperature and accelerate growth. The solar ponds could be used either (a) as a warm water source or (b) with cultivation directly in the solar ponds. With either approach seawater-based solar ponds can potentially be very inexpensive. Both strategies deserve continued study because they have distinct advantages. For case (b), more involved research will generally be required since the solar ponds and cultivation practice for a specific species must both be adjusted to work together.
    keyword(s): Solar energy , Seawater , Temperature , Water , Heat , Gradients , Maintenance , Elevations (Drawings) , Design , Heat exchangers , Water temperature , Filtration , Shorelines AND Storage ,
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      Combining Mariculture and Seawater-Based Solar Ponds

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/107474
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    • Journal of Solar Energy Engineering

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    contributor authorPreston Lowrey
    contributor authorRichard Ford
    contributor authorFrancisco Collado
    contributor authorJane Morgan
    contributor authorEdward Frusti
    date accessioned2017-05-08T23:33:37Z
    date available2017-05-08T23:33:37Z
    date copyrightMay, 1990
    date issued1990
    identifier issn0199-6231
    identifier otherJSEEDO-28221#90_1.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/107474
    description abstractSolar ponds have been thoroughly studied as a means to produce electricity or heat, but there may be comparable potential to use solar ponds to produce optimized environments for the cultivation of some aquaculture crops. For this, conventional brine-based solar ponds could be used. This strategy would probably be most suitable at desert sites where concentrated brine was abundant, pond liners might not be needed, and the crop produced could be shipped to market. Generally, a heat exchanger would be required to transfer heat from the solar pond into the culture ponds. Culture ponds could therefore use either fresh or marine water. In contrast, this paper explores what we name seawater-based solar ponds. These are solar ponds which use seawater in the bottom storage zone and fresh water in the upper convective zone. Because the required temperature elevations for mariculture are only about 10°C, seawater-based solar ponds are conceivable. Seawater-based ponds should be very inexpensive because, by the shore, salt costs would be negligible and a liner might be unnecessary. An initial paper described the design and preliminary experience with two 16 m2 seawater-based solar ponds adapted for mariculture during the winter of 1986-1987 (reference [1]). Subsystems designed for air injection, salt gradient maintenance, filtering to remove ammonia, feeding, and maintenance of water clarity were detailed. Typical temperature and salinity gradients and month-long temperature elevation performance were also presented. This paper presents follow-up experimental results. During Jan. and Feb. 1986, operation of the two seawater-based solar ponds with no cultivation in them produced sustained bottom temperatures averaging 25.5°C. During this period, the ambient air averaged 13.8°C and the overnight low averaged 8.9°C. Elevation of seawater to 20–28°C would be extremely useful for winter mariculture along the entire southern coastline of the United States. In contrast, during the winter of 1987–1988 formal growth comparison experiments were conducted with striped bass, (Morone saxatilis ), growing within two replicate solar ponds and within two replicate, conventional, control ponds. Over six winter months the solar pond bottom temperatures averaged 6°C warmer than the ambient air. Fish weights in the solar ponds increased by a cumulative average of 1105 percent compared with 172 percent for fish in the control ponds. These results are in line with other studies of the influence of temperature on the growth rate of striped bass. Management of the solar ponds involved a simple daily routine. These two experiments, therefore, demonstrate the profound potential of combining suitably designed seawater-based solar ponds with mariculture in winter to raise water temperature and accelerate growth. The solar ponds could be used either (a) as a warm water source or (b) with cultivation directly in the solar ponds. With either approach seawater-based solar ponds can potentially be very inexpensive. Both strategies deserve continued study because they have distinct advantages. For case (b), more involved research will generally be required since the solar ponds and cultivation practice for a specific species must both be adjusted to work together.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleCombining Mariculture and Seawater-Based Solar Ponds
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume112
    journal issue2
    journal titleJournal of Solar Energy Engineering
    identifier doi10.1115/1.2929652
    journal fristpage90
    journal lastpage97
    identifier eissn1528-8986
    keywordsSolar energy
    keywordsSeawater
    keywordsTemperature
    keywordsWater
    keywordsHeat
    keywordsGradients
    keywordsMaintenance
    keywordsElevations (Drawings)
    keywordsDesign
    keywordsHeat exchangers
    keywordsWater temperature
    keywordsFiltration
    keywordsShorelines AND Storage
    treeJournal of Solar Energy Engineering:;1990:;volume( 112 ):;issue: 002
    contenttypeFulltext
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