A chimney turbine was envisioned as a
smoke jack, and illustrated 500 years ago by
Leonardo da Vinci. An animal spitted above a fire or in an oven could be turned by a vertical axis turbine with four angled vanes in the chimney updraft. Alfred Rosling Bennett published the first patent describing a "Convection Mill" in 1896. Even if in the title of the patent and in the claims the word "Toy" clearly appears and even if in the overall description made inside the patent it is evident that the idea was to produce small devices, in page 3 at lines 49–54 Bennett envisions much larger devices for bigger scale applications. A model of this "convection mill", built in 1919 by Albert H. Holmes & Son (London) to demonstrate the phenomenon of convection currents, is on display in the
Science Museum, London. In 1903, Isidoro Cabanyes, a colonel in the Spanish army, proposed a solar chimney power plant in the magazine
La energía eléctrica. Another early description was published in 1931 by German author
Hanns Günther. Beginning in 1975, Robert E. Lucier applied for
patents on a solar chimney electric power generator; between 1978 and 1981 patents (since expired) were granted in Australia, Canada, Israel, and the US. In 1926 Prof Engineer Bernard Dubos proposed to the
French Academy of Sciences the construction of a Solar Aero-Electric Power Plant in North Africa with its solar chimney on the slope of a large mountain. In 1956,
Edgard Nazare, after observing several dust devils in the southern Sahara, filed his first patent in Algiers on the artificial cyclone generator. This patent was re-filed later in Paris In 1982, a small-scale experimental model of a solar draft tower was built in
Manzanares, Ciudad Real, 150 km south of
Madrid, Spain at . The power plant operated for approximately eight years. The tower's
guy-wires were not protected against corrosion and failed due to rust and storm winds. The tower blew over and was decommissioned in 1989. Inexpensive materials were used in order to evaluate their performance. The solar tower was built of iron plating only thick under the direction of a German engineer,
Jörg Schlaich. The project was funded by the German government. The chimney had a height of and a diameter of with a collection area (greenhouse) of and a diameter of , obtaining a maximum power output of about 50
kW. Various materials were used for testing, such as single or double glazing or plastic (which turned out not to be durable enough). One section was used as an actual greenhouse. During its operation, 180 sensors measured inside and outside temperature, collecting humidity and wind speed data on a second-by-second basis. This experimental setup did not sell energy. In December 2010, a tower in
Jinshawan in
Inner Mongolia,
China started operation, producing 200
kilowatts. The 1.38 billion
RMB (
USD 208 million) project was started in May 2009. It was intended to cover and produce 27.5 MW by 2013, but had to be scaled back. The solar chimney plant was expected to improve the climate by covering loose sand, restraining sandstorms. Critics have said that the 50m tall tower is too short to work properly and that it was a mistake to use glass in metal frames for the collector, as many of them cracked and shattered in the heat. and would stand tall, covering an area of . It is expected to produce 40
MW. At that height, it would be nearly twice as tall as the
Belmont TV Mast, which was once the tallest structure in the European Union, before being shortened by 24 metres. In 2001,
EnviroMission proposed to build a solar updraft tower power generating plant known as
Solar Tower Buronga near
Buronga, New South Wales. The company did not complete the project. They have plans for a similar plant in Arizona, and most recently (December 2013) in Texas, but there is no sign of 'breaking ground' in any of Enviromission's proposals. In December 2011, Hyperion Energy, controlled by
Western Australians
Tony Sage and
Dallas Dempster, was reported to be planning to build a 1-km-tall solar updraft tower near
Meekatharra to supply power to Mid-West mining projects. In mid-2008, the
Namibian government approved a proposal for the construction of a 400 MW solar chimney called the 'Greentower'. The tower is planned to be tall and in diameter, and the base will consist of a greenhouse in which cash crops can be grown. A model solar updraft tower was constructed in Turkey as a civil engineering project. Functionality and outcomes are obscure. A second solar updraft tower using a
transpired collector is operating at Trakya University in Edirne, Turkey, and is being used to test various innovations in SUT designs including the ability to recover heat from photovoltaic (PV) arrays. A grade-school pupil's home do-it-yourself SUT demonstration for a school science fair was constructed and studied in 2012, in a suburban Connecticut setting. With a 7-metre stack and 100 square metre collector, this generated a daily average 6.34 mW, from a computer fan as a turbine.
Insolation and wind were the major factors on variance (range from 0.12 to 21.78 mW) in output. In
Xi'an, central China, a 60-metre urban chimney with surrounding collector has significantly reduced urban air pollution. This demonstration project was led by Cao Jun Ji, a chemist at the
Chinese Academy of Sciences' Key Laboratory of Aerosol Chemistry and Physics. This work has since been published on, with performance data and modelling. == Efficiency ==