设计类外文翻译--利用太阳能灶烹饪.doc
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1、 中文3980字 毕业设计(论文) 外文翻译题 目 户 外 炊 具 设 计 专 业 工 业 设 计 2012年Cooking Meals With the Sun for Fuel Preface:Millions of people around the world cook their food over a smoky fire every day. It is often difficult to find wood for the fire. People who do not have wood must spend large amounts of money on cookin
2、g fuel. However, there is a much easier way to cook food using energy from the sun. Solar cookers, or ovens, have been used for centuries. A Swiss scientist made the first solar oven in seventeen sixty-seven. Today, people are using solar cookers in many countries around the world. People use solar
3、ovens to cook food and to heat drinking water to kill bacteria and other harmful organisms.Keyword:solar history classification health and safetyTextChapter 1 History of solar cookingAn odd antecedent of the current solar cooking movement is the story of what Buti and Perlin call the burning mirror
4、. Greeks, Romans, and Chinese all explored the use of curved mirrors, which they found could concentrate the suns rays in manner that would cause nearly any object to explode in flames. Interestingly, the use they perceived for this device was military - could they focus the burning mirror, as examp
5、le, on an enemy warship? Burning mirrors were also used for less venal purposes, such as lighting altar fires and torches for sacrificial parades, but almost no other applied use was found. The idea, now seen in concentrating solar cookers, is in use in many parts of the world today.The principle of
6、 the greenhouse, the so-called solar heat trap, was further utilized in what is thought of as the very first attempt to use solar energy to cook. Many scientists of the era, and laypersons as well, knew about the use of glass to trap heat, but Horace de Saussure, a French-Swiss scientist, wondered w
7、hy that commonly understood phenomenon had not led to additional applied use. In 1767, he built a miniature greenhouse with five glass boxes* one inside the other, set on a black tabletop. Fruit placed in the innermost box cooked nicely - and a new technology was born . De Saussure continued his exp
8、erimentation, using other materials, adding insulation, cooking at different altitudes, etc. This European scientist, exploring solar energy nearly 250 years ago, is widely considered to be the father of todays solar cooking movement. Others followed his lead, including the Briton, Sir John Herschel
9、, and American Samuel Pierpont Langley, later head of the Smithsonian, both of whom conducted experiments with the hot box, the forerunner of todays box cooker, probably still the most common design in use.A French mathematician named Augustin Mouchot, working almost a century later, was eager to en
10、sure that the learning of the past not be lost. He was more interested in practical application than in the number of interesting but not very useful solar devices which were appearing, using the newly discovered potential of the sun (whistles, water movers, talking statues, etc.). He began a search
11、 to use the suns energy efficiently enough to boil water for steam engines, a venture that was not successful. His second project was more successful; he combined the heat trap idea with that of the burning mirror, creating an efficient solar oven from an insulated box, which when further modified b
12、y adding reflecting mirrors, even became a solar still. Eventually, he did create an effective steam engine, but it was too large to be practical; he turned back then to the cooking challenge and developed a number of solar ovens, stills, pumps, and even electricity.Late in the 19th century, other p
13、ioneers in the development of solar thermal (heat generating) technologies include Aubrey Eneas, an American who followed up on the work of Mouchot and formed the first solar power company, building a giant parabolic reflector in the southwest USA. Frank Shuman formed the Sun Power Company in Cairo
14、to promote a solar driven water pumping system, and later a parabolic concentrator generating electricity. Other solar innovations have followed: motors and engines, hot water heaters, photovoltaic lighting, even crematoria. But throughout history, as in Greece and Rome and the Mouchot story, progre
15、ss has repeatedly been interrupted by fluctuations in availability or cost of alternative fuels for all the above purposes.More recently, Amory Lovins, writing in a Forward to the Buti and Perlin book, reminds us that today . we speak of producing oil as if it were made in a factory; but only God pr
16、oduces oil, and all we know is how to mine it and burn it up. Neglecting the interests of future generations who are not here to bid on this oil, we have been squandering in the last few decades a patrimony of hundreds of millions of years. We must turn back to the sun and seek elegant ways to live
17、within the renewable energy income that it bestows on us . He goes on to advise that countless earlier cultures have experienced dwindling fuel resources and then were forced to rediscover earlier knowledge about practical solar energy, bemoaning the absurdity of having to rediscover and reinvent wh
18、at should have been practiced continuously. This document hopes, in some small way, to prevent that scenario from happening yet again.Chapter 2 Classification of solar stoveThe first is a box cooker: It is designed with a special wall that shines or reflect s sunlight into the box. Heat gets trap pe
19、d under a piece of glass or plastic covering the top of the cooker. A box oven is effective for slow cooking of large amounts of food.The second kind is a panel cooker: It includes several flat walls, or panels, that directly reflect the suns light onto the food. The food is inside a separate contai
20、ner of plastic or glass that traps heat energy. People can build panel cookers quickly and with very few supplies. They do not cost much. In Kenya, for example, panel cookers are being manufactured for just two dollars. The third kind of is a parabolic cooker: It has rounded walls that aim sunlight
21、directly into the bottom of the oven. Food cooks quickly in parabolic ovens. However, these cookers are hard to make. They must be re-aimed often to follow the sun. Parabolic cookers can also cause burns and eye injuries if they are not used correctly. You can make solar ovens from boxes or heavy pa
22、per. They will not catch fire . Paper burns at two hundred thirty-two degrees Celsius. A solar cooker never gets that hot. Solar ovens cook food at low temperatures over long periods of time. This permit s people to leave food to cook while they do other things. Chapter 3 Health and safety Solar coo
23、kers when used properly safely and conveniently cook all types of food, including meats, grains, legumes, vegetables and fruits. As with any cooking method, however, care should be taken when solar cooking to maintain food safety, particularly with meats, legumes and grains. 1、Cooking temperaturesSa
24、fety concerns when using solar cookers for cooking and water pasteurization are summarized in the sections below. Some are common sense based to protect the user, and others require careful temperature monitoring to keep the cooking food safe to eat. Harmful food microbes, including bacteria and vir
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