Best fluid for solar panel
Working on my project (still), now getting closer to getting the solar panels.
As they are focused and user higher than normal temperatures, temperatures could potentially reach 200 C (about 400 F) in worst case scenario. In normal operations, they shouldn't, but in case they do, what fluid is better for the purpose? Also, in the winter, temperatures could reach down (rarely) to -30 C (about -22 F). I realise there are many other parameters to consider, but any suggestions? I heard mention of some kind of spirit which is even less dangerous to the environment than glycol. Most of the system is water based anyway, it is only between the solar panels and down to two heat exchangers, where the anti-freeze and above-boiling scenarios could exist. Thank you |
Remember that the higher the temperature of the circulating fluid, the lower the efficiency of the collector. This is not trivial.
The efficiency drops rapidly as collector temperatures go over 100 C (212 F). The lower the collector temp, the higher the collector efficiency and the fewer number of panels need to be installed. This is why I advocate "drain back" collectors. Water (cheap) can be used as a collector fluid and problems with heat exchanger corrosion (and subsequent introduction of toxic materials) become moot. Drain back collectors are one of the simplest type of collector, yet few consider their utility. They are also the longest lasting of collectors with some in Israel lasting more than 50 years! Those areas have cold winters and hot summers. Drain back only pump when the collector temps will support water fluid movement; easy to do. So my suggestion is - just water! Alcohol based mixtures are my second choice as gycols tend to gum up at high temperatures. Steve |
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Surely, as a consultant in the energy field, you could find a diagram to make your point clear. Are you going to leave it to us amateurs to explain things properly? -AC |
Thank you for your fast replies!
I am aware of the efficiency curve, and indeed, I intend to keep these panels (and the fluid), really cool. And I can do so, as I have extensive heat storage facilities, over 1500 kWh of annual heat storage, as well as over 1000 USG of water storage, and other medium term heat storage possibilities. The thermal peak power is around 10kW, although I might be able to tweak it even higher, given my extensive cold storage (into the ground). The panels aren't suitable for drainback, as the way they are designed one cannot be assured they drain properly. I am stuck with some kind of anti-freeze, possibly IPA spirit or similar, trying not to have to use glycol for various reasons. The curcuit for solar panels will be separate from all the other heat storage, which will all be water based, so the volume of the anti-freeze liquid isn't too much (compared to the 1000+ USG for the rest of the system). |
It gets that cold in hong Kong?
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Steve |
If your solar collectors are expected to reach 200degC, you had better deal with the possibility of steam generation in your design. Especially if the collector flow may stagnate (purposely or accidentally) during full sun exposure. One high pressure event is all it takes to destroy lots of work.
Actually, a concentrated solar system using alcohol as antifreeze would have a LOWER boiling point than water alone. Like around 80-90 degC, depending on the strength of alcohol. So what you are proposing here is a high-temperature solar still. If designed properly, your setup might not even need much of a pump at high temperatures. Just design your heat exchanger to also function as a condenser. |
The solar panels are not expected to reach 200 C, on the contrary, they should ideally be kept at 75 C or lower.
In case there is a fault in the thermal transfer system, or anything else that causes the temperature to runaway, the system should survive without substantial damage. The panels themselves can sustain the 200 C stagnation temperature, although the PV part of them (PV-T focused panels) will degrade faster, and yield less, the higher the temperature is. It is an experiment into ways of dealing with solar which is a combination of existing and new technologies. Being an experiment, it must be protected against unforeseen circumstances, whether that be freezing, boiling, overpressure and so on. Since I cannot use the drain back principle, due to the design of the heat absorbers, I need to find the optimum liquid which ideally has a freezing point below -30C, high boiling point (ideally 200 C or more), doesn't gel, doesn't cost a fortune, isn't toxic and doesn't evaporate. I will have to look at characteristics of specific heat capacity vs pump power required as well, though I realise I cannot get everything but have to compromise. I wasn't sufficiently specific in the first post, sorry about that, but I hope you understand the requirements now. The project is located in Scandinavia. Had it been in Hong Kong, I wouldn't have had to care about freezing, on the other hand, I wouldn't have a high heating requirement either. |
Those are some pretty stiff specs. What you are talking about here is hydraulic oil or brake fluid. Neither of which make extremely efficient heat transfer fluids.
By the way, here's a chart of what Steve said: http://www.daviddarling.info/images/...erformance.gif |
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http://s02.static-shell.com/content/...ansfer-oil.pdf It seems to be made for the purpose, what's the downside? This would be a good "Checklist" for what other properties to look for, in a solar panel fluid: Heat Transfer Fluids for Solar Water Heating Systems | Department of Energy |
In terms of viscosity, this Shell fluid almost looks like sludge at 0 C (32 F). Also the heat capacity and thermal conductivity are low (compared to water).
I would design this system to prevent freezing (-30 C, as you specified) using an alcohol/water mixture. Minimize the distillation issue with a low percentage glycol that shifts the fraction (distillation) point higher in temp. Am pulling physical chemistry labs out of my brain from more decades ago that I prefer to mention. The major issue is freezing. Due to the low operating temp, an organic fluid appears way to viscous in the range of temps you operate in. You also have huge summer insolation rates and you may want to put in a back-up circulation pump to prevent summer heat stagnation and a vapor expansive calamity (if you use alcohols). VERY interesting problem. Steve |
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When the circuit is quite small, how would that affect it for having less heat capacity? Isn't it a question of pumping slightly faster, or is the difference too big between water/glycol and these types of oils? All it needs to do is go through the panels then just inside the roof to a heat exchanger - from there, it's all water in the rest of the system. If I did use a glycol/water liquid at something like -30C freezing point, I could design a reverse cycle into the system for those very few days it should get below -30C, or even close to it - just to be safe. I know it's counter-productive, but it wouldn't take much to cycle the liquid a few times during a cold winter night - just to keep it from freezing up. As for the lower boiling point of either water or water/glycol - what would happen if it really stagnates and boils? I would imagine it would blow the overpressure valve eventually, unless I have a disproportionally huge expansion tank. I do have a DC direct drive pump built into the design, both on the primary and secondary side of the heat exchanger. If power is available from the PV panels, and the temperature exceeds a set limit, these pumps will start, regardless of the controller and the rest of the system. |
I am trying to post a diagram of the setup design overview, as it is right now, but it was reduced to quite a small size, so I am trying again, in a different way.
Some text has been cropped in the diagram, as I have problems exporting from TAPPS (Windows XP!) to something readable. DC1 and DC2 pumps will run if 1) electricity is received by PV panels and 2) S1 temperature probe is exceeding a set value (possible 75C to 80C, depends on liquid and certain other items). That way, those pumps will augment the existing pumps in case of AC power failure, controller failure, AC pump failure or other situation causing overheat condition. As I am not always at the house to fix it, I would prefer some liquid which would not boil away in case of a failure, hence the oil mentioned previously sounds interesting (despite viscosity and heat capacity problems). A liquid that never boils nor freezes, at any expected temperature whether there is system failure or not, is quite tempting to consider. Especially if it lasts a long time, and doesn't gel up. https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/18397/Diagram.PNG |
The problem with what you propose is this: what happens during the winter when the sun shines bright? The oil in the collector heats up and thins out, while the plate hx is clogged with tar. The thin oil sheds its heat to warm the cold oil before it can effectively move fast enough through the loop to warm the house.
If you really need that high of a stagnation temperature, the oil will expand, too. Not as much as boiling water, but enough that you will need a holding tank. Something open to atmosphere. |
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Here's a product flyer: http://www.climalife.dehon.com/uploa...-uk-08-pdf.pdf The only problem I see in your application for this product is its high temperature limit. Above 100 degC, it starts to disintegrate/decompose. |
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I see this is a European product, should make it even better for me. I saw that company also has another product which does boil around 105C, but it's stable up to 150 (without gelling up) As I wrote before, I do intend to keep the system cooled off all the time, both for efficiency and to avoid overheating of PVs (it's a hybrid system) and the heat transfer liquid. The only concern is what happens if - despite redundancies - the panels do overheat. |
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Not very many days a year are actually below -10C, and even more seldom -20C. I have been considering a very slow running of the system in case of severe cold, just as an extra precaution. Maybe a one-minute flush when it reaches a certain temperature. Since it's not very often, the loss of energy could be a small price to pay for "extra insurance". Nothing as annoying as busted pipes or panels! |
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1. Pick a common midsize car. For me, this would be a toyota camry or a ford taurus. In europe, maybe bmw 3-series? 2. Go to junkyard and get a condenser with the electric fan(s) attached...they call it a radiator with fans. If you can, get the expansion tank also. 3. Plumb the condenser in place of the overpressure valve in your system. Install two tees in the loop. Orient both tees vertically with the center fittings facing horizontally, one above the other. The center fitting of the top tee should be connected to the outlet of your collector. The center fitting of the bottom tee connects to the lower radiator hose, the upper radiator hose connects to the upwards facing fitting on the top tee. The downwards facing on the lower tee connects to the plumbing going to the main heat exchanger. 4. If you also obtained the expansion tank, make it the high point of the outdoor loop. The filler cap will serve as the overpressure valve. 5. The condenser should be positioned so that it is normally mainly empty, and fills only during a distillation or boiling event. In case of an inferno, the electric fans can be activated via staged thermostats. The latent heat transfer capacity should be well within your 10kw maximum. With this rig, the condenser will regulate the max loop temperature to that of the boiling point of the most volatile fraction of your heat transfer solution. I would recommend a methanol or ethanol mixture, as the distillation would begin around 90 degrees Celsius at atmospheric pressure. Maybe closer to 100 under some pressure. If the condenser/fan unit can keep up with your generated heat, you will retain all your coolant. If your main heat exchanger has fully charged your heat store, and/or cannot keep up with your generated heat, the condenser radiator can be run either passively as a condenser or actively by adding a pump between somewhere and the upper radiator hose. If the temperature rises enough, the alcohol will begin to separate from solution, carrying its latent heat at high volume to the condenser. As the alcohol boils off, the boiling point will rise, providing a small buffer. Adding an electrolyte to the solution will increase this effect due to the increased boiling point of the saltwater brine. The coolant will not all boil out of this system. At a certain level, there will not be enough liquid in the loop to either heat sufficiently to boil or to pump constantly, depending on the plumbing configuration. At this point, your main heat exchanger will still be submerged. If an electrolyte was added, it will be concentrated in the remaining water and will serve as freeze protection. |
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Thanks again, for taking your time for this. |
Jeff,
This is BRILLIANT! I had not thought of using a junk auto radiator. But the entire thing is neat - especially the expansion tank and filler cap "pop off" valve. Thanks, Steve |
OK, I may have missed a couple of things here but this system looks no different from any other glycol (proplyene, not ethylene) solar system. Every system with the proper internal pressure (2 bar minimum) and 40% glycol will convert the WATER in the panels to steam at 170C+. This is a very small amount of real liquid changed to steam and the upshot is that the rest of the liquid will be pushed into the expansion tank (which must be big).
There is no issue with this process. Look up Tyfocor LS heat transfer fluid, made in Germany. I have used lots of it over the years and is the standard in Europe. It is non toxic and recyclable. Some companies in Canada also use USP (food grade) grade propylene glycol and water and it lasts 10 + years. It is all in the design of the system. |
Its been a few years, but I spent a summer touring German technical schools. They had a lot of solar projects. I remember one that used alcohol in the heat exchanger and I think it might have been under a vacuum. The main reason was to lower the boiling point because you gain more latent heat transforming to steam. It also requires less btu to superheat steam vs warming liquid, usually half. So in short, consider a low temperature solar boiler for efficiency, I'm sure easier said than done.
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I can't say I've read all of the replies here, and it seems that there are some requests to supply us with a diagram. What I could add is that I've learned over some time now that a good, safe coolant could be 'propylene' glycol, versus the automotive coolant 'ethylene' glycol, which tends to kill animals who are won over by its aroma. There! I added something to a post. Hopefully it helps someone?
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I used propylen glycol + water (40%) for my solar sysytem. This winter the lowest temp was -22C and everything is ok. But i know - someone who used alcohol 25% (vodka + water)
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