The
ancient Greek /
Latin term
heliocaminus means "solar furnace" and refers to a
glass-enclosed
sunroom intentionally designed to become hotter than the outside air temperature. Legendary accounts of the
Siege of Syracuse (213–212 BC) tell of
Archimedes' heat ray, a set of burnished brass mirrors or
burning glasses supposedly used to ignite attacking ships, though modern historians doubt its veracity. On 24 September 1901, Knut C. Wideen was granted a patent for a "System for collecting and utilizing solar heat", which included a solar furnace. The first modern solar furnace is believed to have been built in France in 1949 by Professor Félix Trombe. The device, the
Mont-Louis Solar Furnace is still in place at Mont-Louis. The Pyrenees were chosen as the site because the area experiences clear skies up to 300 days a year. The
Odeillo Solar Furnace is a larger and more powerful solar furnace. It was built between 1962 and 1968, and started operating in 1969. It's currently the most powerful, based on an achievable temperature of 3500 °C.
The Solar Furnace of Uzbekistan was built in Uzbekistan and opened in 1981 as a part of a Soviet Union "Sun" Complex Research Facility, being the world largest concentrator. == Uses ==