Solar-h2o

From Earlham CS Department
Revision as of 12:31, 5 August 2006 by Ehrennagel (talk | contribs)
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Current System

Our current hot water system uses LP gas and a hot water heater that was installed in 1998.

After working on an energy audit of Miller Farm (our house) it has become clear that we use a huge amount of energy to heat our water. Installing a solar hot water heating system then has become one of our goals, both because it does not require an actual conversion of solar energy to electricty- therefore eliminating the storage problem and the DC to AC conversion problem, and because the load is relatively consistant. Using solar power to heat water is a use of solar energy that makes a lot of sense for a house like ours as it is in a location that does experience a good number of gray days throughout the year and because heating is where we use the most energy.

Currently we have two retired disel fuel tanks in our basement. We are looking into how we prepare one or both of these tanks for use in our solar water system. We want to install a bladder in the tank in order to use it to store water, but protect it from the disel fuel residue.

Needed additions:formula for figuring out how long water needs to be in the pipes at different exterior temperatures in order to be shower temperature.

Experimental Solar Hot Water System

Basic Design

  • Supplies Needed
    • (2) 1 1/4 inch female hot-water unit to hose connectors
    • a pump
    • hose?? (We found some hose in the green house that doesn't have end pieces)
    • sealable barrel (the barrels out back don't have lids that we can open. We need something sealed so that we don't turn the basement into a sauna)
    • copper coil
    • (2) hose to copper pipe connectors
    • tube-o-silicon
    • (long term) plexyglass or glass? and aluminum frame materials.
  • Supplies Purchased
    • 12v Ag Sprayer Pump Product Information
    • 2 Red River 50ft. farm hoses guarentteed up to 180F
    • Teflon Pipe Tape
    • lots of pipe/hose connectors
    • flux
    • 25 ft 10-2# outdoor electrical wire
    • 30ft. soft copper tubing
  • Supplies Purchaced-Addendum
    • nails and bolts for PV stand
    • self-liting butane torch
    • 12v connection cable for pump
    • metal juction box and wire nuts
  • Supplies Acquired
    • scrap lumber
    • duct tape
    • 30? gallon black plastic barrell
    • various tools
    • 64 Watt solar panel
    • solar hot water heating unit
  • Resources
    • Solar Panel Angle by time of year and latitude click

Heat Bank Storage and Heat Transfer Information

We plan on constructing a modified Thermal Store hot water system. We will use a closed loop solar heating panel and heat exchanger to heat water in a recycled 250 gallon feul tank, then cold main water will be passed through a second heat exchanger in this "thermal battery" before entering the farm's standard electric water heater. In this way the liquid in the solar heating loop, the liquid in the 250 gallon tank, and the potable water being heated all remain isolated from each other.