Paper
21 September 2011 Field method for dielectric concentrator design
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Abstract
Field method, also called geometrical vector flux field method, is a well established technique to design concentrators and in general nonimaging optical systems. The method is based on building reflective concentrators with the geometry of field lines, these concentrators do not disturb the flux field and become ideal. In this paper we study the properties of surfaces orthogonal to the field vector J. For rotational symmetric systems J is orthogonal to its curl, then exist a family of surfaces orthogonal to the lines of J, surfaces of constant pseudopotential. From the definition of J, pseudopotential surfaces can be interpreted as surfaces of maximum flux density and can play an important role in the design of nonimaging systems. We study refractive concentrators with the geometry of pseudopotential surfaces. Dielectric material modifies the field lines and then the geometry of the system, including compactness and reflective parts, it also introduce total internal reflection which must be considered in the design. We apply this concept to study hyperbolic concentrator modified with pseudopotential refractive optics and we shown that it achieves the theoretical limit of concentration.
© (2011) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Angel García-Botella, Antonio A. Fernández-Balbuena, and Daniel Vázquez "Field method for dielectric concentrator design", Proc. SPIE 8170, Illumination Optics II, 817003 (21 September 2011); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.896761
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Solar concentrators

Dielectrics

Interfaces

Compound parabolic concentrators

Reflectivity

Confocal microscopy

Refractive index

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