[RE-wrenches] Tube solar collectors

roger dixon roger.dixon at att.net
Mon Jul 20 04:47:05 PDT 2009


I have yet to see a flat plate collector outperform an EV tube setup.  With
EV tubes the angle of incidence is almost always at 90 degrees throughout
the course of the day and the sun's arc.  Except for very early in the
morning and very late in the afternoon, you always have the most/maximum
solar absorption - 90 degrees from the face of the collector.  Does anyone
have a different experience?

Roger Dixon
Certified Wind Site Assessor
Distributor & Installer of Solar & Wind Energy Systems 
Skylands Renewable Energy, LLC
908.337.2057 cell
908.730.6474 fax
roger.dixon at skylandsre.com
www.skylandsre.com


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-----Original Message-----
From: re-wrenches-bounces at lists.re-wrenches.org
[mailto:re-wrenches-bounces at lists.re-wrenches.org] On Behalf Of Kelly
Keilwitz, Whidbey Sun & Wind
Sent: Monday, July 20, 2009 3:12 AM
To: RE Wrenches listserve
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Tube solar collectors

All,
Apricus ET's have a cylindrical absorber surface, which are significantly
better at capturing low angle of incidence energy. I have both a Thermomax
(with flat collector plate internal to the tube) and Apricus collector in
parallel on my own home and see significantly better temperatures early and
late in the day on the Apricus collector.

IMO, ET's have a distinct advantage in our cool, windy, and low-snow
environment (northern Puget Sound).

Kelly Keilwitz, P.E.
Whidbey Sun & Wind, LLC
Renewable Energy Systems
NABCEP Certified PV Installer
987 Wanamaker Rd, 
Coupeville, WA 98239
PH & FAX 360-678-7131
sunwind at whidbeysunwind.com


On 7/19/09 7:29 PM, "Darryl Thayer" <daryl_solar at yahoo.com> wrote:

> 
> HI Joel 
> I have done ev tube and flat plat, I am amazed that the flat plate is
almost
> as good to better than the ev tube.
> 
> As to PV it is true that the output goes as the angle, (cosine function)
but
> if you have a wavey surface it is very slightly better than a flat
surface.
> the cosine effect is there for the entire array, and the modern modules
with
> antireflective coating compensate for much of the reflected energy.  So I
> doubt that the tubes are any better.
> Daryl 
> 
> --- On Sun, 7/19/09, Michael Welch <michael.welch at re-wrenches.org> wrote:
> 
>> From: Michael Welch <michael.welch at re-wrenches.org>
>> Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Tube solar collectors
>> To: "RE-wrenches" <re-wrenches at lists.re-wrenches.org>
>> Date: Sunday, July 19, 2009, 12:27 PM
>> Hi Joel. No experience here, but I
>> did talk to one of their installers (I think it was Carlisle
>> Energy Services) at Intersol last week, displaying one of
>> the modules with its mounting system. Some additional info
>> to consider:
>> 
>> E-T thermal collectors do have a "flat plate" in each tube,
>> so angle of incidence is still critical.
>> 
>> Solyndra's have wrap-around PV materials inside their
>> tubes, so E-W angle of incidence stays the same throughout
>> the day.
>> 
>> They recommend reflective (like white) roof coating which
>> picks up more bounced sunlight from the bottom side.
>> 
>> But it seems to me the main advantage is that they do not
>> require roof penetrations or even ballast, making them a
>> potentially quicker and cheaper install. The claim is that
>> wind underneath will not lift them, and if wind load
>> requirements are higher than normal (not sure where they
>> draw the lines), merely putting skirting around the outside
>> edge of the array keeps the wind out from underneath the
>> modules.
>> 
>> All that said, I also look forward to hearing about field
>> experience and performance.
>> 
>> Joel  Davidson wrote at 07:15 PM 7/18/2009:
>>  
>>> Wrenches,
>>> 
>>> Solyndra claims that their tube collectors "perform
>> optimally when mounted horizontally and packed closely
>> together, thereby covering significantly more of the
>> available roof area and producing more electricity per
>> rooftop on an annual basis than a conventional panel
>> installation." See
http://www.solyndra.com/Products/Greater-Rooftop-Coverage
>>> 
>>> It is my understanding that a solar thermal or PV tube
>> or flat plate collector's performance is based on the angle
>> of incidence and that curved collector performance decreases
>> as the angle of incidence moves away from perpendicular.
>>> 
>>> Does anyone have any field experience with solar
>> thermal evacuated tube collectors or Solyndra PV to show
>> that tubes perform better than flat plate collectors?
>>> 
>>> Joel Davidson 



 



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