The job of a solar collector is simply to collect energy. Adding artificial controls that limit the inlet water temperature usually just ends up limiting the collection of energy in our experience. A good design will try to enhance stratification such that the collectors see the lowest possible inlet temperature but artificially controlling the system to maintain cold inlet temperatures is likely just reducing the yield. Look at it this way, wouldn't you rather collect some energy - even if it's at a lower efficiency due to higher inlet temperatures - than have the system turned off trying to preserve the low inlet water temperatures? That's why almost all SDHW system utilize a differential controller that compares the collector temperature to the temperature near the bottom of the storage tank; turning on the system when the system can provide useful energy and turning the system off when the collector yield falls off.
Jeff
---
Jeff Thornton President - TESS LLC 22 N. Carroll Street, Madison WI USA 53703 Office: (608) 274-2577 Fax: (608) 278-1475 www.tess-inc.com E-Mail: thornton@tess-inc.com
On 10/19/2017 3:36 am, Rm Chemilo via TRNSYS-users wrote:
Hello everyone,I have a question related to solar heating system. What kind of control or setting should I use to keep the inlet temperature of solar collector low? Somehow when I tried to apply the aquastat controller from the SDHW example in TRNSYS into my solar heating system, the inlet temperature really high.Please help meRegards
_______________________________________________ TRNSYS-users mailing list TRNSYS-users@lists.onebuilding.org http://lists.onebuilding.org/listinfo.cgi/trnsys-users-onebuilding.org