Please can you tell me what solar hot water panels are?
Posted by admin on September 9th, 2009 filed in Alternative Power
Solar hot water panels are not a new technology, and were actually very popular in the 1920’s, mostly in the Florida and Southern California areas. The water is heated simply by using the energy of the sun. Water is usually the liquid used to transfer the heat to the heat storage vessel. Flat-plate solar-thermal collectors are generally kept on the roof, and possess an absorber plate to which fluid circulation tubes are fixed.
To convert the sun’s radiation into heat a absorber with a dark selective surface is used. Water transports then the heat to the storage device. With the help of a heat exchanger the water gives off the heat and then moves back to the panel to be reheated. A mechanical pump powered by photovoltaic cell where mounting conditions are available allows to circulate the fluid to the storage vessel mounted higher in the circuit, also known as a thermosiphon. Initially clean and clod water is warmed and kept in a hot water cylinder. Subsequently, solar hot water panels would be fixed on the rooftop, each one with a dark colored absorber plate finished using water circulation tubes.
Heated water from the solar water heater to a place where it can be used or stored. Released heat and circulates the cooled water back to the solar hot water array to be reheated. This repetition of heating, making use of energy, and cooling is started afresh every day and continues the whole day for the efficacious life of the solar hot water heater. Any business that uses a large amount of hot water, like a laundromat, finds these arrays particularly useful. Having the potiential of being a completely automated system solar hot water heaters are made of many hot water panel units.
General misconceptions about solar hot water panels.
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