Climate Control: Solar Heat
Solar heat is an economically efficient, environmentally safe way to heat your home. Solar water heaters are now commonly used as heat sources for radiant floor systems. Normally, a large solar heated storage tank, with electric, gas, or oil backup, supplies hot water to the radiant system, and often provides for domestic needs as well.
Solar heat can also be generated through flat plate collectors and evacuated tube collectors, such as Sunda. Flat plate solar collectors are highly insulated boxes containing a grid of copper pipes bonded to a flat black copper absorber plate, with special glass enhancing solar absorption. Sunda collectors, on the other hand, use multiple vacuum filled glass tubes, each with a tiny amount of anti-freeze hermetically sealed within a small central copper pipe; when heated by the sun, this anti-freeze converts to steam, rises to the top of the tube, transfers its heat to a collector header, then condenses back into liquid.
Solar Heat Working in Conjunction with Radiant Heat
Solar heaters interface well with radiant heated floors, because the large thermal mass common to radiant systems provides an excellent storage unit for the energy generated during the day. At night, this stored thermal energy is slowly released into a homes living space, and a consistent comfort level is achieved and maintained.
Environmental benefits are another reason many folks invest in a solar heat system, besides their inherent compatibility with radiant heating systems. Solar heat systems boil down to simplicity, efficiency, and proven performance time and time again. It makes this equipment an excellent and easy choice to serve as your homes primary heat source.