WEDNESDAY 05 MAY, 2010 |

Shanghai Expo's Purple Solar Powered Pavilion
by Energy Matters

Expo 2010 in Shanghai, China has kicked off and is expected to draw 70 million visitors over its duration. With a theme of
"
Better City, Better
Life", it aims to explore the full potential of urban life in the 21st century and how to create an eco-friendly society.
Renewable energy
features heavily at the Expo, with some very interesting implementations - such
as
Japan's purple solar powered
pavilion. Its Chinese nickname is Zi Can Dao, meaning "purple silkworm island."
Covering approximately 3,900 metres squared, it features the world's first pillow membrane with built-in
amorphous solar cells.
The test solar power system has a generation output of 20–30 kW a day.
Hybrid wind turbines are also used at the site to help generate power for use in
the building.
Other
energy
efficiency features include the use of LED and organic EL lighting, heat
pumps, "ecotubes" under the floor of the building that reduce
temperatures by around 3 degrees Celsius and transpiration cooling systems
that spray a fine mist of collected rainwater on the roof.
The ecotube system also allows sunlight into the building and the cooled floor
also increases the chimney effect of the tubes, reducing the air conditioning load within the Pavilion by
drawing in air
Total building weight was reduced with steel construction and lightweight membrane systems that reduced environmental impact of construction by minimising ground alteration as it was built on top of the soft ground without the need for piles.
Exhibitions within the pavilion include a look at how technology is being used to create "zero-emission
towns" in Japan.
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