Abstract

The majority of power consumption nowadays goes to heating. Global warming, air and water pollution caused by burning fossil fuel for heating encourage researchers and engineers to focus more on renewable energy. The solar system is one of Earth’s primary sources of clean power. Apart from photovoltaic panels and their effectiveness of power generation contribution, solar heaters are primarily used in different applications to recover heating needs in residential and commercial buildings. This paper focuses on an experimental study to generate heat by a solar system using metallic strips immersed in cement inside a solar vacuum tube. Heat can be transferred from inside the tube to the outside using metallic strips with high conductivity. Then, the metallic strips can be used as a heater to heat water or air in an isolated tank by direct contact between the hot strips and the fluid. In order to keep the system providing heat after the absence of sun’s rays, cement is used in this experiment as a heat repository.

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