 |  | Solar Cookers in the Third World (GTZ, 1990, 228 p.) |
 |  | (introduction...) |
 |  | Acknowledgements |
 |  | 1. Introduction |
 |  | 2. Solar Cookers and Solar Cooker Projects |
 |  | (introduction...) |
 |  | 2.1 Types and Techniques |
 |  | 2.2 Function |
 |  | 2.3 Solar Cooking Projects |
 |  | 2.4 State of the Art and Dissemination |
 |  | 3. Conditions of Acceptance for Solar Cookers |
 |  | (introduction...) |
 |  | 3.1 Preliminary Notes |
 |  | 3.2 Solar Radiation |
 |  | 3.3 Energy Demand |
 |  | 3.4 Social Situation |
 |  | 3.5 Dietary Patterns |
 |  | 3.6 Eating Habits |
 |  | 3.7 Cooking Habits |
 |  | 3.8 Use of Stoves, Fireplaces and Hearths |
 |  | 3.9 Solar Cooker Technology |
 |  | 3.10 Economic Efficiency |
 |  | 3.11 Direct and Indirect Impacts |
 |  | 3.12 General Conditions of Acceptance |
 |  | 3.13 Summary |
 |  | 4. Questions Concerning Solar Cookers and Solar Cooker Projects |
 |  | 5. References |
 |  | Appendix 1: Solar Cooking Devices |
 |  | Preliminary notes |
 |  | Box-type solar cookers |
 |  | Reflector Cookers |
 |  | Heat-accumulatinq solar cookers |
 |  | Convective solar cookers |
 |  | Comparative Survey |
 |  | Appendix 2: Self-construction Directions for the ULOG Tropical |