System Purpose. Maximize sun as primary shoulder season (Apr
and Oct) heat source and backup winter (Nov to Mar) heat source for home.
How It Works Summary. Passive solar (windows) and solar hydronics
(solar hot water) heat the air and concrete slab floor which then slowly
releases its heat into home. The
combination works well since passive solar jump starts the heat in the morning,
while solar hydronics continues drawing on excess solar hot water long into the
evening.
System Cost. $4,000, including installation, to pump solar
hot water into floor. This excludes the
cost of windows (which we had anyway), the solar hot water system (whose
primary purpose is domestic hot water usage), and the concrete slab (we needed
a floor anyway).
Shared System
Components
Concrete Slab,
heated both by passive solar and solar hydronics, slowly releases its heat via
conduction (warming your feet), convection (warming the adjacent air) and radiation (heating you and all objects like
direct sunlight). Slab is insulated
below to slow heat loss into underlying sand layer. A day
of sun can raise the slab from 70F to 78F.
During the shoulder season, when outside temperatures can fall to
freezing, the heat stored in the slab from a couple sunny days keeps the house
above 65F for several cloudy days. During
winter, when the wood-fired masonry heater is the primary heat source, the
solar heating systems acts as a bonus.
On a bitter cold, yet sunny day, the stored heat in the slab allows us
to open a window for extra fresh air and skip the morning fire.
Passive Solar System
Components
South-facing windows convert
sunlight into heat via the greenhouse effect (objects absorb solar energy and convert
to heat whose wavelength is too long to escape through the glass). South-facing
windows are best for three reasons. First, the sun spends most of its day in the
south during the heating season. Second, south facing windows take advantage of the most intense solar heating
around noon. Third, during the hot
summer, sunlight can be effectively blocked from entering south-facing windows
via an overhang. Do not use low e glass for passive solar since
they block the needed infrared light. Passive
solar is free heat, since it costs nothing to choose to orient windows south
rather than north, east or west.
Overhang blocks
sunlight from entering windows during the high solar angle summer while
allowing sunlight to slip beneath during the low solar-angle winter. Our
2.5 foot overhang blocks all sunlight on the summer solstice. On the spring and fall equinoxes, the sunlight
reaches in 6 feet. On the winter
solstice, sunlight reaches in 19 feet, touching the far wall. A warm
September requires the addition of shade cloth to block unwanted sunlight. While we used our roof and rain gutter as
overhang, awnings could be used as well.
Solar Hydronics
System Components
Solar Hot Water
System (see How It Works: Solar Hot Water for details).
In-floor Pump circulates
water through a heat exchange element inside the 80 gallon solar hot water
storage tank then out into pex tubing embedded within the 5” concrete
slab. Like any other in-floor pump,
except our relies exclusively on “excess” solar hot water.
Programmable Thermostat
turns In-floor pump on or off depending on the temperature of the water inside
the solar hot water storage tank. Since
our solar hot water is primarily for domestic usage, the thermostat is set to only pull “excess” heat out of the tank. We’ve
discovered that “excess” is anything over 130F since even our well-insulated
tank quickly loses its heat to the cellar at temperatures above 130F. This excess temperature is only reached on
sunny days.
In-floor Pex Tubing,
embedded like a winding plastic snake throughout the concrete slab, carries
water whose heat is conducted into the slab.
As the slab absorbs the tubing’s
heat, the water cools and is returned via the pump to be reheated by the solar
hot water storage tank.
System Maintenance. Turn
solar hydronics system on (via thermostat) at beginning of heating season and
turn off at end.
Report Card. Winter = A.
Shoulder Season = B. (See Report Card for details).
Biggest Challenge. The shoulder season house temperature can swing
from a chilly 62F to a sweaty 80F. We adapt to 62F with sweaters and
blankets. While we can keep the house
below 80F by opening more windows, we often don’t. On sunny days we allow the house to overheat
so that the stored slab heat can keep the house warmer during the inevitable cloudy
and cold days which follow. We actually wanted (and designed) our house
to experience the seasonal temperature fluctuations to feel more Land connected.
Biggest success
factor. Orienting most windows
south. Even the ancient Greeks practiced
what we’ve largely forgotten. In addition to the huge energy and cost
savings, south facing windows maximize light during winter, brightening our
sometimes darkened spirits. And it costs us nothing to
orient them south.
The Connection. What could be more Land connecting than
sunlight streaming through a window, the bright patterns moving across the
floor throughout the day? And then
there’s the absolute joy, the thrill, of experiencing a beach-like 80F when its below zero outside.
Solar energy is being utilized on a larger scale
ReplyDeleteThanks for the great information. I have solar hydronic heating installed at home and it is totally worth it!
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