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Performance Modeling of Low Cost Solar Collectors in Central Asia. Project Presentation. Steph Angione, Zach Auger, Adrienne Buell, Suza Gilbert, Emily Kunen, Missy Loureiro, Alex Surasky-Ysasi, Amalia Telbis. Problem Definition.
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Performance Modeling of Low Cost Solar Collectors in Central Asia Project Presentation Steph Angione, Zach Auger, Adrienne Buell, Suza Gilbert, Emily Kunen, Missy Loureiro, Alex Surasky-Ysasi, Amalia Telbis
Problem Definition • Goal: Design a performance model for a solar collector in central Asia • Specifications: • Heat water for domestic use • Be low cost • Use local materials • Be efficient • Be easily maintained • Be sustainable
Step 1:Background Research • Background Research: • Region and climate data • Materials and availability • Heat transfer • Testing and modeling process
Geography, Climate and Housing: Tajikistan • Latitude of 34°00’N and longitude of 68°00’E • More than half of the country lies above 3,000 meters • Climate • Highlands similar to lower Himalayas • Housing • Built into the mountains • Multifamily/ multistory • Construction • Raw bricks, plaster & cut straw (horizontal layers) • Where available: wood used for roof beams • Cement often used for roof
Geography, Climate and Housing :Afghanistan • Latitude of 33°00’N and longitude of 65°00’E • Includes three distinct areas: • central highlands, southern plateau, and northern plains • Climate • hottest in southwest, coldest in northern regions with waves of intense cold and temperatures below zero • Housing • Construction Materials: stone, coniferous wood, plaster, straw, and brick • Terraced Housing
Materials • What to look for when choosing a material: • Thermal Properties • Durability • Availability • Construction Methods • Maintenance • Costs • Materials Specified by EWB: • Sheet Metal • Wood • Glass • Black Paint • Horsehair • Regional Materials: • Clay, Cement, Brick, Sheep Wool, Straw, Plaster
Sheet Metal • Variety of metals available • Best heat capacity – Aluminum [903 J/kg*K] • Best conductivity – Copper [401 W/m*K] • Durability and Construction Methods: • Cutting tasks only require aviation snips • Pieces are easy to bend • Copper Sheet: • Can be shaped into any form easily • Doesn’t not crack when hammered, stamped, forged or pressed • Resists corrosion and does not rust • Can be recycled • Easiest metal to solder • Aluminum Sheet: • Excellent conductor of heat • Light (about 1/3 weight of copper) • Withstands wind, rain, chemicals, pollution • Excellent durability • Can be recycled • Soldering requires specialized reaction fluxes and tools
Wood: Used for construction Easily cut Hand-tools sufficient Durable insulation Readily available Black Paint: Used to absorb solar energy by changing the absoptivity Absorptivity = a = 94% Radiates back 90% of solar radiation Glass: Used as glazing Reduces losses Has to be tempered and have high transmittance Horsehair and sheep wool: Used for insulation: lasts for over 200 years Material readily available 0.3 million horses in Afghanistan 11-14 million sheep in Afghanistan Other insulation: Bousillages – mixture of moss and clay Outer layer is a mixture of horsehair, water, and clay
Hot Material Heat Transfer Formulas • Conduction • Fourier’s Law: dQ/dt=-kA(dT/dx) • Through a material • Convection • Newton’s Law of Cooling: dQ/dt=hA(Ts-Tf) • Fluid flowing past a solid • Radiation • Stephan-Boltzman Law: dQ/dt=εσATb4 • Heat emitted by an object
Components of a Solar Collector • Absorber Plate • Absorber Surface Coatings • Glazing • Insulation • Casing
Testing and Modeling Determine All Variables and Constants Visualized Design/Schematic CAD software: SolidWorks, ProE Free-hand sketches
Calculations • Use of MatLab or Excel • Use of possible simulations • F-chart! • TRNSYS
Step 2: Identify the Situation • Specified Situation: • Domestic hot water heating for average household size of 7 people • Water use per person per day: 25 liters • Region: rural, mountainous • System output temperature: 60 °C • Year round functionality • Storage tank water capacity: 1-2 days • Delivery system: either batch or continuous flow
Solar Heater Types and Designs • Passive vs. Active Solar Heaters • Active • use pumps to circulate water or an antifreeze solution through heat-absorbing solar thermal collectors • Passive • The water is circulated without the aid of pumps or controls • Open Loop vs. Closed Loop • If the liquid that needs to be heated is also the one being circulated:Open Loop • If antifreeze or another solution used in a heat exchanger to heat the water:Closed Loop
Possibilities and their +/-…what we ended up picking • Active • Open Loop: • (+) cost less • (-) pump controlled • (-) only possibility for freeze protection: manually draining X Second one OUT !!! • Closed Loop: • Drain Down: • (-): not reliable !!! X First one OUT !!! • Drain Back: • (+) good freeze protection • (+) can use water/water instead of antifreeze • (-) pump and 2 different storage tanks • Passive • Batch • (+)easy (can even be a tank painted in black) • (+) offers freeze protection because the water is only present in the tanks and the areas are large; the water cools off slowly • (-) takes long to heat the amount of water • Thermosyphon • (+) no need for pumps • (+) offers good freeze protection • (-) heavy tank placed above the collector • (-) efficiency decreases when using indirect heating • We voted between: Drain Back, Batch and Thermosyphon • Systems chosen • Group I (Suza, Missy, Emily and Zach): Drain Back System • Group II (Stephanie, Adrienne, Alex and Amalia): Thermosyphon
Team Drain Back Team Members: Melissa Loureiro Emily Kunen Suza Gilbert Zach Auger
Drainback • Solar collector located above storage tank • 2 liquid system • Both can be water • 1liquid water and 1an antifreeze solution • Active closed loop system • Uses pump • Pump circulates water through collectors when collectors are warmer than stored water • Heat exchanger used in storage tank • Heat transfer between circulating fluid and potable water • Circulating solution drains to a 2nd tank when pump shuts off • Tank is placed on a tilt for complete drainage
Team Drain Back System • Collector • 28 parallel copper pipes • Copper plate • 1.13m^2 area • Soda lime glass glazing • Sheep wool insulation • Black interior • Housing • Heat Exchanger • Heat transfer fluid flows through exchanger • Exchanger within storage tank containing working fluid • Pump • Drain back Reservoir
Model • Software: Microsoft Excel • Spreadsheets for: • -Materials • -Energy Input and Output • -Collector • -Heat Exchanger • -Sunlight • -Efficiency
Efficiency and Costs • Efficiency: • Total Cost: US$1167.02 • Soft Copper Tubing for Heat Exchanger: $83.26/100 feet • Copper Sheet: $147.30/ 2 sheets • Copper Feeder Pipes: $26.00/12 feet • Glazing: $320.00/ 2 sheets • Black Paint: $30/gallon
What’s Next • Performance Modeling • Several days of testing • Slight variations in model • Prototype • Improve construction techniques • Compare to performance model
Team Thermosyphon Adrienne Buell Steph Angione Alex Surasky-Ysasi Amalia Telbis
Thermosyphon • Area 1.85 m^2: standardized according to available glazing • Absorber Plate: 0.02” thick copper sheet bent around the parallel pipes • Glazing: 1/8” thick single glass sheet with 0.01% iron-content • Parallel Flow Pattern: Copper piping • Header and footer 1.5” • Parallel pipes 0.5” • Free floating array supported by wood risers every 10” • Housing: Wood frame that slides into the mounting stand at 33o • Insulation: • dead air between plate and layer of plywood • boussilage clay, water, and horsehair • 1m high stand with brick walls encasing dead air • Back flow prevention: one way valve • Pressure relief valve needed at high antifreeze temperatures
Thermosyphon: • Working fluid: 40.5% ethanol-water mixture • Boiling Temperatures: 84oC • Freezing Temperature: -24oC • Heat exchanger: • Countercurrent • Bendable copper tubing: 1”outer diameter • Length: 9m • 11 loops- 0.25m diameter spaced at 1.05” • Storage tank: placed above the solar collector • Dimensions: 0.5m x 0.5m x 1.05 m steel casing • Insulation: sheep wool, boussilage and brick
Modeling: • Software used: Excel • Governing Equations: • Heat transfer in the solar collector • Mass flow rate calculation • Heat transfer in the heat exchanger • Collector plate efficiencies at a constant ambient temperature (20oC) for parallel pipes of different sizes vs. the temperature of the antifreeze • Collector plate temperatures at a constant ambient temperature (20°C) for parallel pipes of different sizes vs. the temperature of the antifreeze
Results: • Annual Output Temperatures of both the water and the antifreeze: • The water reaches The antifreeze reaches • ▪ app. 30°C in the winter ▪app. 65°C in the winter • ▪ app. 58°C in the summer ▪above boiling point in summer
What’s next? • Use computer programming software • F-chart method to analyze efficiencies • Matlab to ease the process of iteration • Optimize design • Model different regions • Change the working fluid during the summer or use a different antifreeze solution • Make a business plan and try to implement
Design Comparison THERMOSYPHON Freeze protection =working fluid: ethanol-water mixture Uses natural convection Price ~ $1250 US Collector Area = 1.85 meters^2 Parallel pipes in collector = 21 Parallel pipe outer diameter = .5 in Single Glazing Length of Heat Exchanger = 9 meters DRAIN BACK Freeze protection = draining system Powered by pump Price ~ $1167 US Collector Area = 1.13 meters^2 Parallel pipes in collector = 28 Parallel pipe outer diameter = .625 in Single Glazing Length of Heat Exchanger = 3.01 meters
What is Sustainable Development? • Meeting present needs with out compromising those of the future • Goals • Improve quality of life • Promote further economic growth • Improve social conditions and equality • Protect and improve environmental and human health
How can our project be made sustainable? • Use local resources, knowledge, and skills • Include local involvement in • Planning • Design • Implementation • Have education and training to foster an understanding of and appreciation for the technology • Develop renewable energy markets to encourage further research and economic growth, making the technology competitive and desirable
If only we had more time… Designing -Solar collector designs limited to those in existence that have been tested -Overlooked Possibilities -Collector plate designs -Materials
Modeling -Optimizing values of the collector using computer programs -Designing a program where a user enters desired parameters and the output is their personalized collector Prototyping and Testing -Theoretical model vs. Prototype -Need to construct and TEST a real model -Compare theoretical and experimental values -Construction techniques can be simplified
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS • Dr. Chris Bull • Peter Argo – US Embassy in Tajikistan • Professor Chason • Professor Hurt • Professor Tripathi • Professor Breuer • EWB! Thanks!