eceee
EceISS12_907AD_22mars.gif 

 RSS Feed

Buy Summer Study proceedings

Proceedings.gif

Design, Installation, and Performance of Solar Hot Water Systems in New Homes

Eric Helton, IBACOS, Inc.
Robb Aldrich and Gayathri Vijayakumar, Steven Winter Associates, Inc.

Keywords

Abstract

The performance of solar water heating systems at three homes in cold climates is reported. The house located in Colorado utilized the solar thermal system for space heating and domestic hot water and produced savings of approximately 105 therms of natural gas and $93 over the course of the first year of operation. The solar fraction ranged between 7% in the winter and 100% in the summer months. A prototype house in Wisconsin exhibited solar domestic hot water savings of approximately 86 therms of natural gas and $58 for 10 months of operation, with solar fractions ranging between 16% in the winter to 93% in the summer. The solar domestic hot water system installed at a house built in Massachusetts offset 72 gallons of heating oil/biodiesel fuel worth $133 by offering solar fractions between 26% and 87%. Installation deviations from the designs which affected performance were experienced in two of the homes. In one house, the solar loop heat exchanger within the storage tank was piped backwards, discouraging tank stratification. In another case, a tempering valve was installed between the storage tank and the tankless water heater, forcing the heater to fire, even when the solar storage tank had the capability of supplying the draw of hot water. These issues and their solutions are discussed. These cases are used to highlight some of the challenges of incorporating solar thermal systems into production building.

Paper

Download this paper as pdf: 011_230.pdf

Panels of the 2006 ACEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in Buildings

Panel 1. Residential Buildings: Technologies, Design, Performance Analysis, and Building Industry Trends

Panel 2. Residential Buildings: Program Design, Implementation, and Evaluation

Panel 3. Commercial Buildings: Technologies, Design, Performance Analysis, and Building Industry Trends

Panel 4. Commercial Buildings: Program Design, Implementation, and Evaluation

Panel 5. Utility Regulation and Competition: Incentives, Strategies, and Policies

Panel 6. Market Transformation: Designing for Lasting Change

Panel 7. Human and Social Dimensions of Energy Use: Trends and Their Implications

Panel 8. Changing the Climate for Energy Efficiency: Local, National, and International Policy Dimensions

Panel 9. Appliances, Lighting, Information Technologies, Consumer Electronics, and Miscellaneous End Uses

Panel 10. Roundtables and Interactive Sessions: Learning by Doing

Panel 11. Efficient Communities

Panel 12. Energy Conversations

EcoDesign.gifSpringer.gif

European Directives:
Dedicated pages
and policy briefs

Directives.gif