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Solar Water Heating

Solar Water Heating

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Solar Water Heating. Main part of solar water heater is collector. Two types of collector Flat plate collector Concentrating/focusing collector. Flat plate collectors. absorbs both direct and diffused radiations Simple and cheap Can be used to heat fluid to low temperatures(

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Page 1: Solar Water Heating

Solar Water Heating

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Main part of solar water heater is collector.Two types of collector1. Flat plate collector2. Concentrating/focusing collector

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Flat plate collectors

• absorbs both direct and diffused radiations• Simple and cheap• Can be used to heat fluid to low

temperatures(<100oC)

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Concentrating Collectors

• Can only use direct beam• Expensive and more sophisticated• Require precise positioning controls• Can heat fluid to high temperatures

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(a) Open-container(trough) on ground; heat flows easily to ground. (b) Open trough, offground. Clear water is not a good absorber; loses heat by evaporation.(c) Black closed container (‘tank’); large heat loss, especially to wind; noovernight storage. (d) Black tank, insulated underneath; heat losses confinedto top surface, therefore only half those of (c). (e) Sheltered blacktank; cheap, but materials degrade. (f) Metal tube and plate collector, andflooded plate. Standard commercial collector; fluid moves through thecollector, e.g. to a separate storage tank; flooded plate more efficientthan tube and plate. (g) Double glazed flat plate; better insulated versionof (f); can operate up to 100 C; iron-free ∼glass less absorbing than windowglass. (h) Selective surface. short long , radiative losses reduced.(i) Evacuated collector. No convection losses to the cover.

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Heat Balance

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Uncovered Heaters (a-d)

1. Uncovered container on the ground2. Uncovered, Open container off ground3. Enclosed black container, black tank

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Uncovered container on the ground

This is the simplest possible water ‘heater’ .An outdoors swimming pool is a common example of a container of water exposed to sunshine, and on, or in, the ground. On a sunny day the water is warmed, but the temperature rise is limited as heat is conducted easily to the ground and also lost by evaporation and convection. Having black surfaces would increase absorption, but obscure cleanliness.

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Uncovered, open container off the ground

Raising the open container off the ground reduces conductive loss, but much of the heat that is retained goes into increased evaporation, thus lessening the temperature increase.

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Enclosed black container; black tank

Here the water is enclosed in a shallow matt-black tank or bag So no heat is lost by evaporation. The matt-black outer surface absorbs radiation well (typically α= 09). Some of this absorbed heat is then passed to the water inside by conduction. This type of heater is cheap, easy to make and gives moderately hot water ( 20C above ∼ambient), but may have a short lifetime. Loss of heat by forced convection from wind severely limits the performance. Despite the simplicity of construction, however, the analysis of the heating is relatively complex.

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Black Container with Bottom Insulation

The heat losses of the previous system can be almost halved simply by insulating the bottom of the container.Almost any material that traps air in a matrix of small volumes ≤1mm is useful as an insulatoron this rear side, e.g. fiberglass, expanded polystyrene or wood shavings. The insulating volumes of air must not be too large, since otherwise the air will transfer heat by convection. Also the material must be dry, since water within the matrix is a much better conductor than air.

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Improved solar water heaters

1. Sheltered black container2. Metal plate collectors with moving fluid3. Selective surfaces4. Evacuated collectors

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Sheltered black container

Sheltering within a box with transparent cover reduces the convective losses to wind.Glass is often the chosen cover material, having small absorptance for the solar short wave irradiation

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Metal Plate Collectors with moving fluid(aka tube and plate collectors)

• High commercial capability• water is confined in parallel tubes which are attached to a black metal plate.• Typically the tube diameter is 2cm, the tube spacing 20cm and the ∼ ∼ plate

thickness 03cm.∼• The plate and tubes are sheltered from the wind in a framework with a glass

top and thick side and rear insulation.• This collector has essentially the same circuit analogue as the sheltered

black bag.• Flooded plate collectors are potentially more efficient than tube collectors

because of increased thermal contact area. • The heated fluid may be used immediately, or it may be stored and/or

recirculated.

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•P u =ηc Ap G• ηc = ηspηpf • ηsp = τcovαp-UL(Tp – Ta )/Gwhich shows that as the plate gets hotter, the losses increase until ηsp decreases to zero at the ‘equilibrium’ temperature.• Since the plate temp is now usually known, the collector efficiency is usually related to fluid temp as: ηsp= ηpfτcovαp-ηpfUL(Tf – Ta )/G

Efficiency of flat plate collector

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In a well-designed collector, the temperature difference between the plate and the fluid is small and the value of ηpf is nearly one. Typically ηpf= 085 and is almost independent of the operating conditions, and, since pipes and storage tanks should be well insulated, Tf≈Tp.The capture efficiency ηpf (and therefore also the collector efficiency ηc) would vary linearly with temperatureif UL= 1/RL were constant, but in practice theradiative resistance decreases appreciably as Tp increases. Therefore a plot of ηc against operating temperature has a slight curvature.

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The performance of a flat plate collector, and in particular its efficiencyat high temperatures, can be substantially improved by1. Reducing the convective transfer between the plate

and the outer glass cover by inserting an extra glass cover.

2. Reducing the radiative loss from the plate by making its surface not simply black but selective, i.e. strongly absorbing but weakly emitting.

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System with separate storage

• Active systemsInclude a pump and control unit

• Passive systemsInvolve flow by thermo siphoning

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Selective Surfaces

Metal–semiconductor stack

Here a semiconductor (which strongly absorbs solar short wave radiation) is deposited on a metal.(which is a weak emitter of thermal long wave radiation).

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Evacuated CollectorsUsing a selective absorbing surface substantially reduces the radiative losses from a collector. To obtain yet larger temperature differences, (e.g. to deliver heat at temperatures around or greater than 100C, for which there is substantial industrial demand), it is necessary to reduce the convective losses as well. One way is to use extra layers of glass above a flat plate collector(‘double glazing’). A method that gives better efficiency but is technically more difficult is to evacuate the space between the plate and its glass cover. This requires a very strong structural configuration to prevent the large air pressure forces breaking the glass cover; such a configuration is an outer tube of circular cross-section. Within this evacuated tube is placed the absorbing tube.Typically the tubes have outer diameter D = 5cm and inner diameter d = 4cm. By suitably connecting an array of these tubes, collectors may receive both direct and diffuse radiations

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