I'm curious if the lack of heat in the lightrays will ruin the immersion of sunlight? Perhaps couple this with an IR heatlamp to add the real feel of sunrays hitting your skin?
The main issue is the blue scattering. If you can get away with pre-scattering the light before it hits the dish adding an IR lamp is no issue since you're using a parabolic mirror which has no diffraction. I have no idea if it 'feels' right doing that though.
For full immersion you would also want a number of different light sources since leds are have very narrow spectra.
The method proposed in the video already accounts for the narrow LED spectra by using lights that have excellent color reproduction (the part where he recommends a CR rating of 95%+)
To answer anyone looking at this now: the Rayleigh scattering needs to produce diffuse light [0]. Which actually makes the project easier to pull off since you just need to place secondary lights all around the roof and walls of the room that emit AM1.5 diffuse light globally and not worry about any sort of filtering on the main light, which you need to match to AM1.5 direct.
Yes, patio heaters are very cheap. Such an infrared emitter would have been a very easy addition to this project, at the cost of doubling the power draw.
konjin|5 years ago
For full immersion you would also want a number of different light sources since leds are have very narrow spectra.
lelandbatey|5 years ago
konjin|5 years ago
[0] Applied Photovoltaics, Earthscan Publications, 2007: http://www.eng.uc.edu/~beaucag/Classes/SolarPowerForAfrica/B...
unknown|5 years ago
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findthewords|5 years ago