Flat plate thermal solar collector efficiency: Transient behavior under working conditions part II: Model application and design contributions
Article
Overview
Research
Identity
Additional Document Info
View All
Overview
abstract
An experimental research was performed on a solar facility with a nine-year-old, on-campus field with 50 m2 area of flat plate solar collectors. A transient model was developed, adapted to the characteristics of this facility and experimentally validated as described in Part I of this paper. The efficiency normalization curve (ENC) operating conditions for the steady-state test are different from the working conditions. Significant differences between the ENC and the model based predictions were found and quantified. The significance of the transient behavior is compared with the thermal inertia proposed in the EN-12975:2006 standard for the quasi-dynamic test. Using the model capabilities to predict the collector performance under transient working conditions, the influence of the operating conditions on the collector efficiency and on the useful heat produced is studied individually. The relevance of those conditions is ranked as follows: the wind (velocity magnitude and direction) was the most influential, followed by the aging of the collector surfaces, convective heat losses, thermal inertia and the incident angle of irradiance. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
publication date
published in
Research
keywords
Collector performance; Collector thermal efficiency; Flat plate collector; Solar Domestic Hot Water; Solar energy; Transient model Collector performance; Domestic hot water; Flat-plate collector; Thermal efficiency; Transient model; Incident solar radiation; Solar energy; Solar heating; Testing; Collector efficiency
Identity
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
Additional Document Info
start page
end page
volume
issue