From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Solar hot water refers to water heated by
solar energy.
Solar heating systems are generally composed of solar thermal
collectors, a fluid system to move the heat from the collector to its point
of usage, and a reservoir or tank for heat storage and subsequent use. The
systems may be used to heat domestic hot water, swimming pool water, or for
space heating. The heat can also be used for industrial applications or as
an energy input for other uses such as cooling equipment.[1]
In many climates, a solar heating system can provide a very high
percentage (50 to 75%) of domestic hot water energy. In many northern
European
countries, combined hot water and space heating systems (solar
combisystems) are used to provide 15 to 25% of home heating energy.
Residential solar thermal installations can be subdivided in two kind of
systems: compact and pumped systems. Both typically include an auxiliary
energy source (electric heating element or connection to a gas or fuel oil
central heating system) that is activated when the water in the tank falls
below a minimum temperature setting such as 50 °C.
Hence, hot water is always available.
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Solar heating thermal collectors
There are three main kinds of solar thermal collectors in common use:
Formed Plastic Collectors, Flat Collectors, and Evacuated Tube Collectors.
Formed Plastic Collectors (such as
polypropylene,
EPDM or
PET
plastics) consist of tubes or formed panels through which water is
circulated and heated by the sun's radiation. Used for extending the
swimming season in swimming pools. In some countries heating an open-air
swimming pool with non-renewable energy sources is not allowed, and then
these inexpensive systems offer a good solution. This panel is not suitable
for year round uses like providing hot water for home use, primarily due to
its lack of insulation which reduces its effectiveness greatly when the
ambient air temperature is lower than the temperature of the fluid being
heated.
A flat collector consists of a thin absorber sheet (usually
copper, to
which a black or selective coating is applied) backed by a grid or coil of
fluid tubing and placed in an insulated casing with a glass cover. Fluid is
circulated through the tubing to remove the heat from the absorber and
transport it to an insulated water tank, to a
heat exchanger, or to some other device for using the heated fluid.
Instead of metal collectors, some new polymer flat plate collectors are
now being produced in Europe. These may be wholly
polymer,
or they may be metal plates behind which are freeze-tolerant water channels
made of silicone rubber instead of metal. Polymers being flexible and
therefore freeze-tolerant, they are able to use plain water in them instead
of antifreeze, so that in some cases they are able to plumb directly into
existing water tanks instead of needing the tank to be replaced with one
with extra heat exchangers.
Evacuated (or vacuum) tubes panel.
Evacuated tube collectors are made of a series of modular tubes,
mounted in parallel, whose number can be added to or reduced as hot water
delivery needs change. This type of collector consists of rows of parallel
transparent glass tubes, each of which contains an absorber tube (in place
of the absorber plate to which metal tubes are attached in a flat-plate
collector). The tubes are covered with a special light-modulating coating.
In an evacuated tube collector, sunlight passing through an outer glass tube
heats the absorber tube contained within it.
Two types of tube collectors are distinguished by their heat transfer
method: the simplest pumps a heat transfer fluid (water or
antifreeze) through a U-shaped copper tube placed in each of the glass
collector tubes. The second type uses a sealed heat pipe that contains a
liquid that vapourizes as it is heated. The vapour rises to a heat-transfer
bulb that is positioned outside the collector tube in a pipe through which a
second heat transfer liquid (the water or antifreeze) is pumped. For both
types, the heated liquid then circulates through a heat exchanger and gives
off its heat to water that is stored in a storage tank (which itself may be
kept warm partially by sunlight). Evacuated tube collectors heat to higher
temperatures, with some models providing considerably more solar yield per
square meter than flat panels. However, they are more expensive and fragile
than flat panels.
This information is licensed under
the GNU Free Documentation
License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Solar
hot water".