New type mirror system for a solar heater, greenhouse, passive solar home heating

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  • Опубликовано: 25 апр 2021
  • I use this cheap mirror system for
    - hot water supply to my summer cottage
    - heating my greenhouse
    - small heating of the house through its large window
    My video will talk about this system of mirrors which helped this solar heater to give hot water to my summer cottage. We can notice that my mirrors are relatives of the mirror system of this solar heater, but my mirrors are cheaper and I placed them far away.
    Now I will show you how my mirrors direct this solar radiation onto this solar heater. These are 3 spots of solar radiation from three mirrors of my system, and we see that those 3 spots combine on the surface of my heater. In addition, my solar heater receives solar radiation not only from the mirrors, but also directly from the sun.
    Now we see the 2nd relative of my mirrors, and I described it in this old video. This system was also used for hot water supply of my summer cottage when solar radiation heats up 50 liters of water inside this tank, and for example, now we see that the solar heater increased the water temperature to 71 ºC.
    Now I show the 3rd relative of my mirrors, and we see that it is very cheap. The cost of materials for these mirrors is less than 1 $ / sq.m, and this is a reflective mylar film on a thin sheet of expanded polystyrene with several wooden battens. Of course, the reflection accuracy is not high, and here we can notice that solar radiation from my cheap mirrors focuses on this area with a height of less than 1 m.
    I use this mirror system for a small solar space heating of the house, and now we are inside it. It is the solar radiation from my cheap mirrors, and it increases the well-known phenomenon of heating our homes through their large windows.
    In addition, I use my mirror system to add extra solar radiation to my greenhouse. The mirrors heat these 60 liters of water during a sunny day, and the warm water heats the greenhouse at night.
    I remind you that this version of my mirror system was used to heat 50 liters of water in this tank of hot water supply to my summer cottage. Now my system consists of strips of old glass mirrors, and they are absolutely motionless from morning to evening because they are located along this West-East line.
    Let's look at how this spot of solar radiation from the immovable mirrors moves during one day, from morning to evening. It is morning, and the spot is here, and these are time points during one day of the 3rd of July. We see that the spot trying to hit this line all day long, and I remind you that the mirrors are motionless.
    Now I will remind you of a similar experiment, but in a different situation, when my immovable mirrors were installed much closer to the white screen. This experiment was during one day of the 6 of July, three days after that experiment with distant mirrors. We can notice that the closer we place the mirrors to the solar heater, the slower this spot of solar radiation moves in this horizontal direction.
    That is why the near location of the mirrors is more preferable in such a situation, when the width of the solar heater does not exceed several meters. But the difference between the near and distant location disappears in such cases when the mirrors direct additional solar radiation onto a long row of solar collectors.
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Комментарии • 14

  • @ehhhhhhhhhh
    @ehhhhhhhhhh 2 года назад +3

    Really cool idea. I've been wondering how much money people could save on their energy bills in the winter months if they used solar mirrors in their yards and directed extra sunlight at their homes.

  • @AndrewHelgeCox
    @AndrewHelgeCox 3 года назад +3

    I think the Mylar mirrors might last longer if glued-down so that motion caused by the wind cannot induce fatigue in the thin aluminium foil which causes it to detach from the plastic.

  • @gardentours
    @gardentours 2 года назад

    Great idea!

  • @user-ym7tf
    @user-ym7tf 3 года назад

    Hi friend, I wait more videos, thanks😀😀

  • @user-ym7tf
    @user-ym7tf 3 года назад

    Nice video, very nice greenhouse. The materials here are more expensive. Thanks.

  • @gogonkt
    @gogonkt 2 года назад

    Bravo 👏

  • @hardwareful
    @hardwareful Год назад

    Nice segmented heliostat :)

  • @yukselsahin2878
    @yukselsahin2878 3 года назад

    güzel görünüyor

  • @danielroden9424
    @danielroden9424 3 года назад

    excellent! i have a 4 foot x 100 foot roll of mylar from amazon for 30 dollars i will be making a solar heater for my pool using black tubing and a reflector to increase the amount of sun light collected

  • @lowrads3653
    @lowrads3653 3 года назад

    If you had a stack of thin plates of metal sandwiched with fine gaps between them, would they be a more effective captor of light energy? Seems like it would have to keep bouncing between them to the bottom of each layer. Possibly the gaps could be filled with glass, as that would admit light and reflect IR, while also reducing convective losses. The heat pipe would flow transversely past the metal layers.

  • @vincentjean6756
    @vincentjean6756 3 года назад

    Hi Sergiy, would be nice to do a video about hot water storage solutions. How many litres of water would I need to heat a single family house? How do size such system? Thanks!

  • @AndrewHelgeCox
    @AndrewHelgeCox 3 года назад +1

    Any tips on getting cheap Mylar to experiment with for those of us in Western Europe?

    • @melsibley5191
      @melsibley5191 3 года назад

      Mylar is also known as emergency blankets in a lot of first aid kits

  • @alexinchina2025
    @alexinchina2025 Год назад

    what if instead of water in bottles you can use sand in cans?