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DIY Solar Water Heating
Build Your Own DIY Solar Water Heating Panel
Building your own Solar Water Heating Panel is not beyond anyone with
basic DIY/handyman skills, and no specialist tools or equipment are required. In
this article we will look at making a basic but efficient and robust solar water
heating panel using materials you can find at local builders merchants, or
online, and common household tools.
In this article we will give an overview of solar water heating panel design and
construction, focussing on the component parts and the reasoning behind their
selection.
(for even simpler temporary solar water heating panel designs see our articles:
Solar Water Heating for Swimming Pools (1) or Simple Solar Water Heating (2).)
Solar Water Heating Panels
A solar water heating panel is a device through which water (or other fluid) is
pumped being heated by the sun as it travels through the panel. In some panels
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there is a long pipe which snakes through the panel up and down as it moves
from left to right (A), but for the panel design discussed here we will take
advantage of the fact that hot water rises (or cool water falls) so we can
arrange the pipework in a way which is more sturdy and more efficient (B).
If we were just to put bare pipework out in the sun, it would heat up the water
passing through it, but a lot of heat would be reflected and radiated away. To
avoid this, the pipework needs to be fitted into an insulated box with a clear
front so that the sun's rays can pass through the front, and even if the light
bounces off the pipework, its energy can still be absorbed and held in the box.
Think about how hot the interior of a car gets when parked in direct sunlight. We
want our pipework to be surrounded by this type of retained heat to increase
the heating effect on the water passing through the pipes.
And that is about it; that is all a basic solar water heating panel is - some
pipework in an insulated glass fronted box.
Solar Panel Dimensions
Deciding what size solar panel to make is tricky. Rather than picking an arbitrary
size, it is better to let the availabilty of the necessary component parts dictate
the size to you. For example, if you can get your hands on a piece of
toughened glass of a certain size free of charge, it would make sense to build
the panel around the dimensions of that glass.
Inside the panel will be an absorber plate made of sheet aluminium. If you do
not have the necessary tools to safely/tidily cut aluminium sheet, it would make
sense to select panel dimensions which mean you will not need to cut the sheet
or sheets of aluminimum. Similarly, you ideally want to minimise copper pipe
waste, so if you purchase pipe in 2 metre lengths, you would want to design
your panel with runs of 1 metre, 66cm, or 50cm for zero waste, and not 70cm
since that would result in 60cm of waste from each pipe.
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Sizing the panel in terms of your location, hot water consumption, and tank size
is tricker. It is much easier to install multiple solar water heating panels
rather than just one large one because they start to get very heavy and difficult
to mount as they get bigger. This also has the benefit that in the colder months
you can connect multiple solar panels in series - so heated water from one
panel is further heated by the next, and so on - and then connect them in
parallel in the summer months for maximum efficiency. If you are just starting
off, make a panel and see how you get on.
Construction of the Solar Collector Housing
The pipework needs to be completely enclosed in an insulated box to maximum
efficiency. An example of such a box is pictured above. It is simply a wooden
frame screwed onto a backing sheet of marine plywood, or any other material
you can find which is strong and can be treated or painted to keep out the rain.
Treat or paint all of the timber now while it is all accessible and easy, and then
fill any gaps with heat resistant silicon sealant so that the finished box will
be air-tight (and therefore retain the heat). Hammerite make some good long
lasting products for painting and treating exterior woodwork.
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The box must now be lined with insulation. Any heat resistant insulation will
do, but the cheaper it is, the more space it will take up and therefore the deeper
the box you will need to make. Therefore we suggest you use multi-foil
insulation which is designed for use by roofers (it goes under the waterproof
membrane which is in turn underneath the tiles). This offers excellent insulation
qualities, the foil reflects heat back into the panel really well, and it is very thin
and easy to use.
Absorber Plate
In order to increase the solar absorption of the solar collector, the pipework
should be fixed to a metal sheet - copper would be best, but it would be
expensive and heavy, therefore aluminium is usually used. This absorber
plate acts as a heatsink absorbing energy from the sun's rays and then giving it
to the water passing through the pipework heating it up.
The absorber plate cannot be too thin or it will bend and warp when it is heated,
and it cannot be too thick or it will be too heavy, expensive, and less efficient.
The ideal thickness has been found to be around 1.5mm which corresponds to
the common standardised metal sheet thickness of 16 SWG. You may struggle
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to find a sheet of the same size as your solar panel, but multiple small sheets
can be used together.
The absorber plate should be primed and painted with heat resistant black
paint on both sides to maximise its heat absorption and reduce its
reflectivity.
The absorber plate must now be fitted into the box. Ideally it will not just lie
directly on top of the insulation crushing it (and therefore making it less
efficient). Instead mount it on brackets or to small wooden piers which pass
through the insulation so that when fitted there is no air gap between the back
of the absorber plate and the insulation, but the insulation is also not being
compressed by the plate.
Solar Water Heating Panel Pipework
Copper pipe is almost always used in solar water heating panels. Copper
transfers heat very well - think very expensive pans - it is available from all
plumbers and builders merchants, and it is relatively flexible. There are a wide
range of connectors available for all sizes of copper pipe and these when
soldered make very strong and reliable joints. Copper pipe is sold in packs of
straight lengths or in coils. It is better to go for the straight lengths for this solar
panels design as it is all straight lines.
For the horizontal pipes along the top and bottom of the pipework use 22mm
pipe, and for the verticals use 15mm pipe. You need a couple of 22mm end
stops, and sufficient 22-15-22mm reducing tees (which join the horizontals to
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the verticals) to complete the panel of the size you want.
Cut the pipes to the lengths you would like and put everything together to make
you you have sized it correctly; then you need to permanently solder all of the
joints. See our guide for details on How to Solder Copper Pipe (3). With the
pipe array complete, prime and paint it all over with heat resistant black paint.
The copper pipe array must be fitted securely to the absorber plate. The
pipework should be in contact with the absorber plate as much as possible to
maximise heat transfer and efficiency. One way to achieve this is to lie the
pipe array on the absorber plate and drill small holes in the plate either side of
the pipework in around 10-15 positions around the array. Feed 15-20cm lengths
of strong uninsulated solid wire over the pipe and through each pair of holes
and twist the wire ends together on the other side.
Before going around and tightening the wire twists as tight as they will go,
spread heat sink compound (aka thermal compound) on the underside of all
the pipework. When you do the final tightening of the wires, the pipe array will
be pulled against the absorber plate and the heat sink compound will aid heat
transfer.
The Glass
When you have tested your solar panel very carefully to ensure that there are
no leaks or other problems, it is finally time to seal the whole thing up
permanently with a sheet of glass. While it is possible to use clear acrylic or
other types of clear plastic, these materials tend to become milky/foggy over
time, they are hard to clean well, and they scratch easily. Though more
expensive, and heavier, glass is the best option for the front of a robust solar
water heating panel.
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As with the absorber plate, the thickness of the glass is very important. Thin
glass is weak and will not be able to support its own weight on a large panel,
but it lets through lots of sunlight with low reflectivity. Thick glass is strong, but
also heavy, and every additional mm of thickness of glass increases the
reflectivity and therefore reduces the amount of sun getting through it. The
ideal thickness is around 4-5mm.
Toughened glass should always be used as it is much safer during
construction of the panel, and it will not be smashed by a stray football
The glass should be sealed to the box using heat resistant silicon sealant, and
then use wooden beading around its edges to protect them and reduce the
chance of water getting in.
More Information
If this article has whetted your appetite for more information, a good starting
point is our article DIY Solar Water Heating Prototype (4) which shows the
construction and testing of a solar water heating panel of the type discussed
above together with making a heat exchanger (5) to use the panel for indirect
heating.
Click here for our article on Direct Solar Water Heating (6) (with pump), and here
for the article on Thermosyphon Solar Water Heating (7) (without pump). Those
articles cover the simplest solar water heating systems to put together using
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your panel.
Web Link References
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
http://www.reuk.co.uk/Solar-Water-Heating-Swimming-Pools.htm
http://www.reuk.co.uk/Simple-Solar-Water-Heating.htm
http://www.reuk.co.uk/How-to-Solder-Copper-Pipe.htm
http://www.reuk.co.uk/DIY-Solar-Water-Heating-Prototype.htm
http://www.reuk.co.uk/Solar-Hot-Water-Heat-Exchanger.htm
http://www.reuk.co.uk/Direct-Solar-Water-Heating-System.htm
http://www.reuk.co.uk/Thermosyphon-Solar-Water-Heating.htm
Article from REUK.co.uk:
http://www.reuk.co.uk/DIY-Solar-Water-Heating.htm
Published: 24th September 2014
© REUK 2015
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