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Heating Houses with Solar Power

Renewables:

Heating Houses with Solar Power

Residential temperature control via window awnings and deciduous trees. Residential temperature control via window awnings and deciduous trees.
This article has been reviewed by the following Topic Editor: David Hassenzahl PhD

Heating the interior spaces of buildings and producing hot water account for a major portion of the energy use in a typical home. Traditional methods for solar space heating maximize interception of sunlight in winter, yet minimize it in summer by placing awnings over windows or landscaping with deciduous trees. Also, sophisticated, low-temperature solar thermal systems are available to collect sunlight for space and water heating.

For example, glass-enclosed flat-plate solar collectors on rooftops have black plates that absorb sunlight and transfer the thermal energy to fluids (water or a less-corrosive liquid) passing through flow tubes lying flat against the surface of the plates.

 

Glazed flat-plate solar collector for heating buildings.

A black absorber plate, oriented toward the sun, warms the fluid passing through the flow tubes.

 

 

More efficient, but more expensive, systems use receiver tubes similar to those in parabolic trough solar systems. The fluid heated in flow or receiver tubes goes into the building to warm the interior, generate hot water, or both.

Solar residential heating is becoming more commonplace. Israel—a country blessed with ample sunlight but little petroleum—leads the world in solar heating systems per capita, and solar water heating accounts for 3.4% of the country’s total energy consumption. [1] In terms of sheer number of installations, however, China dominates: The country accounts for about 75% of the global capacity added in 2006 and for nearly 65% of the world total. Half of the households in some Chinese cities use solar water heaters. [2]

[1] Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics (2008) Summary of Israel's Energy Balances. http://www1.cbs.gov.il/www/yarhon/n1_e.xls, accessed March 26, 2008.

[2] Hodum, R. (2007) Kunming Heats Up as China’s “Solar City”. Worldwatch Institute, http://www.worldwatch.org/node/5105, accessed March 28, 2008.

This is an excerpt from the book Global Climate Change: Convergence of Disciplines by Dr. Arnold J. Bloom and taken from UCVerse of the University of California.

©2010 Sinauer Associates and UC Regents

The Author

Arnold J Bloom Arnold J. Bloom became a botanist through a circuitous route. Upon receiving an undergraduate degree in Physics from Yale University, he spent several years developing computer models of the spread of air pollution over cities in the USA and Germany. He received a Ph.D. in Biological Sciences from Stanford University, where he also completed a two-semester course in Environmental Legislation at the Law School. He conducted postdoctoral research on the temperature responses of plants at the ... (Full Bio)

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