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A house fitted with both thermodynamic and photovoltaic panels, used to heat the house
Solar heating is the usage of solar energy to provide process, space or water heating. The heating of water is covered in solar hot water. Solar heating design is divided into two groups:
- Passive solar heating does not require electrical or mechanical equipment, and may rely on the design and structure of the house to collect, store and distribute heat throughout the building (passive solar building design).
Also solar energy can be used to cool (solar cooling).
History
The very first solar heating factory in the world was built by Jewish immigrants, from South Africa, in Ashqelon Israel in 1952. In 1980 a law was passed in Israel making solar heating mandatory.
How solar heating works
A typical household solar heating system consists of a solar panel (or solar collector) with a heat transfer fluid flowing through it to transport the heat energy collected to somewhere useful, usually a hot water tank or household radiators. The solar panel is located somewhere with good light levels throughout the day, often on the roof of the building. A pump pushes the heat transfer liquid (often just treated water) through the panel. The heat is thus taken from the panel and transferred to a storage container.
Other uses
Solar heating also refers to the heating of any objects, including buildings, cars, through solar radiation. Solar heating depends on the solar radiation, surface area, surface reflectance, surface emissivity, ambient temperature, and thermal convection from wind. With objects on Earth, solar heating reaches a state of temperature equilibrium as the heat imparted by the sun is offset by the heat given off through reflection, radiation, and convection. White objects stay dramatically cooler than other objects because the most important variables are characteristics of the surface, reflectance, emissivity, convection and surface area. Silvery objects get hot even though they are excellent reflectors because they are very poor in heat emission. Human skin, and many other living surfaces, like tree leaves, have near perfect emissivity (~1.0), and so stay pretty cool. A perfect sunscreen is a dye that perfectly absorbs, with high emissivity, or perfectly reflects, ultraviolet and infrared while being transparent in visible light.
It is worth noting that it is impossible for any material to be a good absorber of a given frequency and at the same time a poor emitter of the same frequency ( or the other way around). The difference in absorption and emission arises because the radiation emitted by a relatively cold object like a human, has much lower frequency than the radiation emitted by a hot object like the sun. Materials which have high emissivity for low frequencies but high absorption at higher frequencies will therefore stay much cooler than materials which have high absorption of high frequencies and low emission of low frequencies.
Worldwide
Solar heating in Europe
| Solar heating systems with glazed collectors* (kWth)23 |
| Country |
Total (2007) |
Added in 2007 |
Added in 2006 |
Added in 2005 |
Added in 2004 |
| Germany |
6 295 800 |
665 000 |
1 050 000 |
665 000 |
525 000 |
| Greece |
2 499 140 |
198 100 |
168 000 |
154 350 |
150 500 |
| Austria |
2 024 839 |
196 700 |
204 868 |
163 429 |
127 816 |
| Italy |
770 161 |
171 500 |
130 200 |
88 941 |
68 417 |
| Spain |
674 916 |
183 400 |
122 500 |
74 760 |
63 000 |
| France |
609 420 |
178 500 |
154 000 |
85 050 |
36 400 |
| Cyprus |
437 640 |
45 500 |
42 000 |
35 000 |
21 000 |
| Switzerland |
356 286 |
45 802 |
36 304 |
27 392 |
21 812 |
| Denmark |
269 696 |
16 100 |
17 710 |
14 875 |
14 000 |
| Netherlands |
236 839 |
13 930 |
10 280 |
14 174 |
18 410 |
| UK |
213 444 |
37 800 |
37 800 |
19 600 |
17 500 |
| Sweden |
183 676 |
17 826 |
19 977 |
15 835 |
14 041 |
| Poland |
164 428 |
46 900 |
28 980 |
19 390 |
20 230 |
| Portugal |
144 165 |
17 500 |
14 000 |
11 200 |
7 000 |
| Belgium |
102 283 |
29 400 |
24 945 |
14 164 |
10 290 |
| Czech Republic |
92 211 |
17 500 |
15 421 |
10 885 |
8 575 |
| Slovenia |
84 910 |
8 400 |
4 830 |
3 360 |
1 260 |
| Slovakia |
57 225 |
6 300 |
5 950 |
5 250 |
3 850 |
| Romania |
48 720 |
350 |
280 |
280 |
280 |
| Ireland |
21 553 |
10 500 |
3 500 |
2 450 |
1 400 |
| Malta |
20 552 |
3 850 |
3 150 |
2 800 |
2 951 |
| Bulgaria |
17 570 |
1 750 |
1 540 |
1 400 |
1 260 |
| Finland |
14 345 |
2 800 |
2 380 |
1 668 |
1 141 |
| Luxembourg |
13 230 |
2 100 |
1 750 |
1 330 |
1 190 |
| Hungary |
9 975 |
5 600 |
700 |
700 |
1 050 |
| Latvia |
3 745 |
1 050 |
840 |
700 |
350 |
| Lithuania |
2 415 |
490 |
420 |
350 |
350 |
| Estonia |
1 029 |
245 |
210 |
175 |
175 |
| Total GWth |
15.37 |
1.92 |
2.10 |
1.43 |
1.14 |
| * = The relation between collector area and capacity is 1 m2 = 0.7 kWthermal |
See also
References
External links
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