Why does Radiantec not recommend evacuated tube type solar collectors?
The most appropriate solar collector for a given application depends largely upon the operating temperature with respect to the ambient air.
It can be convenient to divide solar collectors into three categories according to their operating temperatures: low temperature, medium temperature and high temperature. Then, it will be very important to select the right solar collector type for the project.
We will see that in the design process of a solar heating system, it will be very important to operate the solar heating system at the lowest possible temperature.
The Low Temperature Collector
This type of collector operates at a temperature that is close to the outside ambient temperature. An example would be a solar swimming pool heater. The collector operates at temperatures in the 70s, and if we assume that the ambient temperatures are also in the 70s we can see that the solar collector has little or no heat to lose to the outside air. These solar collectors can be simple and low in cost as well as being highly efficient at their low operating temperatures. The problem with low temperature collectors is that once temperatures rise, there is nothing to keep the harvested solar heat within the system and it escapes to the outside air.
The ASHRAE performance chart at the bottom of this page shows this problem well. Solar efficiency starts off very good, but as temperatures rise, it falls off severely.
Low temperature collector
Medium Temperature Collectors
High Temperature Collectors
High temperature collector
Here are two graphics of solar collector efficiencies from:
ASHRAE [The American Society of Heating and Refrigeration Engineers] and
There are other important considerations as well.
They both say the same thing and what they say is important. All solar collectors operate at best efficiency when they operate at lower temperature. For all solar collectors, when temperatures go up, their efficiency goes down. The simple, low cost, low technology collectors harvest more energy than the high tech collectors at modest temperatures. The evacuated tube solar collectors are only more productive at very high temperatures and they are less productive at the moderate temperatures that we should be working with.
Stagnation Temperature
Net Solar Aperture
The solar collectors on the left have good amount of net solar aperture whereas the evacuated tube solar collectors on the right do not. In the example on the right a considerable amount of solar energy passes right through gaps in the solar array and strikes the roof without entering the solar collectors at all. This type of solar collector will harvest a lesser amount of solar energy with respect to the gross surface area of the solar collector, but that lesser amount of energy will be well conserved within the evacuated tubes up to high operating temperatures.
Snow Shedding
Loss of Vacuum
SUMMARY
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