John I. Yellott

John I. Yellott
Born (1908-10-25)October 25, 1908
Bel Air Maryland
Died December 30, 1986(1986-12-30) (aged 78)
Phoenix, Arizona
Residence United States
Citizenship United States
Nationality American
Fields Solar engineering
Institutions Manhattan Project
University of Rochester
Arizona State University
Yellott Solar Laboratories
Alma mater Johns Hopkins University
Known for Passive solar technology

John I. Yellott (October 25, 1908 – December 30, 1986) was a scientist internationally recognized as a pioneer in passive solar energy, and an inventor with many patents to his credit. In his honor the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (“ASME”) Solar Division confers a biannual "John I. Yellott Award" which "recognizes ASME members who have demonstrated sustained leadership within the Solar Energy Division, have a reputation for performing high-quality solar energy research and have made significant contributions to solar engineering through education, state or federal government service or in the private sector."[1]

Early life, education, academia, and war service

John Ingle Yellott was born in Bel Air, Maryland, the son of the Reverend Dr. John I. (1873-1935) and Mildred Walker Nelson Yellott (1876-1954). He was educated at Bel Air High School and Episcopal High School in Alexandria, Virginia, and then studied Mechanical Engineering at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, receiving his M.E. in 1931 and his M.M.E. with distinction in 1933.[2]

Yellott embarked on a career in academia at the Stephens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, and at Illinois Institute of Technology, where he was chairman of the Department of Mechanical Engineering from 1940 to 1943 and director of the Institute of Gas Technology from 1943 to 1945. During World War II he was assigned to the Manhattan Project to work on the development of atomic weapons as a consultant to the Metallurgical Laboratory of the University of Chicago.[3]

Changing fields

After the War Yellott served as Director of Research, Locomotive Development Committee, Bituminous Coal Research from 1945 until 1955.[3] In 1955 at age 47 after having already achieved recognition in steam, coal, gas, and nuclear energy, he switched fields—to passive solar energy. Yellott said the change resulted from "the realization that the entire world, and the United States in particular, was running out of fluid fuels, and that we must find a way to gain economic access to the limitless energy of the sun."[2] In a 1974 interview with Popular Science Magazine Yellott said he anticipated soon "[t]he inexorable forces of economics will bring about the age of solar energy."[4] He organized the 1957 Living with the Sun competition, a seminal event in the history of the solar house.[5]

Industrial consulting and return to academia

In June 1958 Yellott founded John Yellott Engineering Laboratories, and the Yellott Solar Energy Laboratory, in Phoenix, Arizona.[2] He became an industrial consultant, with a primary focus on reflective glazing. He served as Headmaster and then Director of Development for Phoenix Country Day School, and taught environmental control systems at the College of Architecture at Arizona State University. As the first Chairman of the ASME Solar Energy Applications Group (later Solar Energy Division) he was in a position of leadership "that was critical to the official 'rediscovery' of solar energy following the 1973 oil crisis".[2][6] Soon after the oil crisis, Arizona State's College of Architecture instituted a solar program and chose Yellott as its head; he continued to teach there until his retirement at age 70.

Solar engineering

Yellott's early interest, the source of much consulting work, was on the transparency and transmissivity of glass. In 1960s he helped to develop the solar heat gain factor (SHGF) method of calculating the passive thermal role of glass, now the standard method accepted by the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers. He served as a consultant to major industrial concerns such as Corning Glass, PPG Industries, Libbey-Owen-Ford Glass company, Shatterprufe Glass Company of Port Elizabeth, South Africa; and Pilkington Brothers Glass Company of Great Britain. One of Yellott's clients was Northrup, Inc. whose founder Leonard L. Northrup Jr. was introduced to solar technology by Yellott, and whose company went on to develop some of the first solar air conditioning systems and heliostats, under Yellott's on-going advice.

Design sketch from Yellott's patent for a coal-injected turbine locomotive

According to his Illinois Institute of Technology Hall of Fame entry,[7] Yellott's work resulted in more than fifty patents, such as an electric locomotive with a coal fired gas turbine using pulverized coal directly injected into a combustion chamber;[8] a film-type solar water heater [9] and a transparent cover to heat swimming pools by trapping solar radiation[10] Yellott's pool cover idea remains in commercial use to this day.[11] He also contributed his solar expertise to civic projects such as the landmark Carefree Sundial in Carefree, Arizona.

Sketch of full scale roofpond apparatus experiment at Trinity University, Texas

Yellott pioneered passive solar cooling as a field parallel to solar heating, with particular attention to water spray and controlled evaporation.[6] As with any innovator, not all experiments met with success.

Yellott's collaboration with solar entrepreneur Harold Hay on developing an evaporative solar system called a roofpond, which Yellott considered "the simplest system which can accomplish both heating and cooling with the same equipment,” proved to be not so simple.[6] The experiments at Yellott's laboratory encountered obstacles such as the unexpected "healthy growth of 'wrigglers' within plastic-enclosed water" from the city mains; then "a pair of nesting birds was attracted to the comfort of a projecting portion of the roofpond. . . ." (The researchers eliminated the unwelcome 'wrigglers' as well as a prolific growth of algae with chemical treatment; they considered the “cheerfulness of the birds a pleasant relief from the drudgery of data-collection,” but recommended “preventive measures for those not wanting such company.”)[6]

Yellott's and Hay's experiments did prove the roofpond concept technically feasible, later confirmed with expanded testing on dormitory roofs at Trinity University[12] in Texas.[13] Nonetheless, in the words of solar scientist Kenneth Haggard of the San Luis Obsispo Solar Group, implementation of the idea of maintaining a large puddle of water on one's roof to cool the interior "awaits the next period of blossoming of passive solar architecture."[6] (Hay defended roofponds, acknowledging that while a roofpond design error proved "highly expensive to a young architect and his client," nonetheless there is an "unnecessary fear of having bodies of water overhead." Hay also noted that a review of all roofpond installations in the United States concluded the roofpond "outperforms any other single passive system in both heating and cooling modes" and opined "It may be DOE's best kept-secret buried under hundreds of reports.")[14]

Yellott's achievements particularly in the area of glazing and solar radiation capture have stood the test of time. According to Dr. Jeffrey Cook, College of Architecture and Design, Arizona State University, writing the introduction to the Passive Solar Journal's John I. Yellott Memorial issue, "he made major contributions in areas of basic research, instrumentation, analytic methods, applications, collaboration, education, and demonstration."[6] Cook also wrote: "[h]e published no definitive book," but "[a]rticles bearing Yellott's name will remain classics in solar energy literature;" he "developed no distinctive demonstration, no outrageous solar machine, and no landmark building or award winning engineering system," yet "as a consultant he influenced such major architectural feats as the St. Louis Arch and the new Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank;” his analysis “contributed to the industry development of architectural glasses . . . that have gained worldwide use.”[6] His pervasive influence in solar science is largely found in the ongoing work of others, as “he was a mentor to architects, inventors, and students.” "Thus,” Cook concluded, “as gentle and persuasive as the sun, Yellott touched many people and places.".[6]

Yellott died of a heart attack in Phoenix in 1986, survived by his (second) wife Barbara, a son and a daughter, two stepsons and six grandchildren.[2]

Bibliography

Yellott's papers are kept at the American Heritage Center at the University of Wyoming.

Yellott published hundreds of articles, papers, and addresses. A selected list of 120 just in solar energy can be found at Passive Solar Journal Vol. 4, No. 3, 1987 pg. 329 et seq., from which the following representative sample is drawn:

Awards, honors, and tributes

See also

References

  1. ASME Newsletter in PDF format
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Cook, Jeffrey (1987). "John Yellott: A Tribute". Solar Today (January/February): 4–5.
  3. 1 2 Curriculum Vitae, John Ingle Yellott (1985) PDF file provided courtesy Dr. John I. ("Jack") Yellott, Jr.
  4. Gilmore, C. P. (1974). "Can Sunshine heat/Cool Your House?". Popular Science (March): 77, 81 & 160–161.(Quoting John I. Yellott on prospects for solar energy, which Yellott called "just around the corner from economic feasibility thanks to the Arabs.")
  5. Denzer, Anthony (2013). The Solar House: Pioneering Sustainable Design. Rizzoli. ISBN 978-0847840052.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Cook, Jeffrey (1987). "Gentle and Persuasive as the Sun: John I. Yellott 1908-1986". Passive Solar Journal. 4 (3): 237–240.
  7. 1 2 http://www.iit.edu/about/history/hall_of_fame/john_ingle_yellot.shtml
  8. Yellott U.S. Patent #2,839,253 June 17, 1958
  9. Yellott U.S. Patent #3,146,774 Sept. 1, 1964
  10. Yellott U.S. Patent #3,072,920 Jan. 15, 1963.
  11. An example of one of several companies now using Yellott's pool cover design--his patent long ago expired.
  12. Trinity University website
  13. Clark, Gene; Fred Loxsom; Philip Haves (1987). "Performance of Roofpond Cooled Residences in U.S Climates". Passive Solar Journal. 4 (3): 265–292.
  14. Hay, Harold R. (1987). "John Yellott and Roofpond Development". Passive Solar Journal. 4 (3): 241–254.
  15. The London Gazette 14 Sept. 1972(recording Yellott's initial enrollment as an Officer in the Order of the Hospital of St. John--at that time the Gazette indicates he already had an M.B.E.. His C.V. indicates Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth had appointed him an M.B.E. on August 24, 1970) The photo above shows Yellott at a formal dinner in his honor at Arizona State University wearing the M.B.E. and O. St. J of J. medals.
  16. The London Gazette, 26 July 1984 (reflecting Her Majesty's promotion of Dr. Yellott from Officer to Associate Commander)
  17. http://www.ases.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=235&Itemid=98
  18. Brian Norton (2011) Solar Water Heaters: A Review of Systems Research and Design Innovation, Green. 1, 189–207, ISSN (Online) 1869-8778

External links

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