| I am looking at the possibility of building my own flate-plate collectors to heat water for both domestic water use and radiant floor heating for my house. I live in northern New Brunswick Canada. I plan to have a closed-loop system with 2 storage tanks and heat-exchangers in the basement. I recently had a quote from a solar heating company for about 8000$ for the whole system (with 4 panels of 20 evacuated tubes) uninstalled. I would like to find ways to lower this cost without lowering the capacity of the system.
I have a fairly good idea of how to make these collectors:
- Aluminum channel
- Back panel made of plywood or aluminum sheet metal
- insulation in the back and side:
- glazing: double-glazed glass
- tubing: flexible copper pipes
- some sort of scellant and alu flat stock held with screws
- heatresistent flat black paint
It seems like the absorber plate is the most difficult part of the collector to design so to have:
- good thermal contact with the copper tubes
- no galvanic reaction with copper tubes
- good lifespan
- no thermal deformation
- little mass
- little thermal mass
I need ideas of how to make this cheap (meaning preferably not out of copper) but efficient.
On the web I have seen places where they just attach the tubing to a flat sheet metal plate with wire. I wonder if this would give enough thermal contact.
On another website, I have seen some guy bending sheet metal alu with a press. That seems interesting but I don't have access to equipment to do that.
Thanks for your help. |
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