The sun as cooling agent: Solar refrigerator for medicine to manage without socket
Cooler for medicine and vaccines to meet WHO standards - health and environmental protection - DBU promotes with approximately 50.000 Euro
OsnabrĂŒck. Medicine is a "sensitive plantâ: it dislikes high temperatures. Vaccines are similarly sensitive. Both is difficult on longer transports in developing countries where electricity is not constantly available. Now the
company va-Q-tec from WĂŒrzburg takes a first step towards solving the problem: developing a vacuum-insulated refrigerator for medicine using solar energy as cooling agent - supported by the Deutsche Bundesstiftung Umwelt DBU and in co-operation with the Baden-WĂŒrttemberg company Phocos. Objective: A solar cooler that meets the demands of the World Health Organisation (WHO). "The safe transport of medicine is vital. This project goes a step further and combines health- and environmental protection", says DBU Secretary General Dr.-Ing. E. h. Fritz Brickwedde. The DBU promotes the project with 50.000 Euro.
The result: an ideal insulation
Basis of the new refrigerator is a very efficient insulation developed by va-Q-tec and working by means of a vacuum. "We use fine-porous quartz powder which is pressed to plates and then wrapped with an aluminium foil,â says the physicist Dr. Joachim Kuhn from va-Q-tec. "Finally all air is sucked out.â The result: an ideal insulation. Now, the fiddlers from va-O-tec and Phocos want to construct a cooler using that excellent insulation which can be supplied by solar energy.
"The cooler could be continuously operated with solar energy"
The researchers want to construct a solar refrigerator which needs on average less than 10W. "Then in regions without electricity the cooler could be continuously operated with solar energy,â expects Dr. Kuhn. A small photovoltaic conversion module is sufficient. At night and on cloudy days, a rechargeable battery or an integrated refrigeration store should maintain the operation.
The solar refrigerator does finally meet the demands of the WHO