Producing More Power By Cooling Solar Panels | Trial 2

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 ส.ค. 2023
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    Learning from a past video when I sprayed 130 gallons on a solar panel to gain 5% power output I wanted to test a similar but different concept. This trial will simulate a closed loop system pulling water from a pool to both heat the pool and cool the solar panel with the idea that we create more power with a cool panel. Will it work?
    DISCLAIMER: This video and description contain affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission.

ความคิดเห็น • 369

  • @Chris-jt7xg
    @Chris-jt7xg 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

    I think the pex material has poor thermal transfer but if you put metal tubing with a heat transfer paste that would work better. You definitely want the back ope as you discovered because the panel cools off by releasing radiant heat.

    • @gg-gn3re
      @gg-gn3re 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      water over the top is best but unfeasible. a good closed loop system would just be closing in the entire backing of the panel and running water through it. any form of tubing is not going to transfer well as it doesn't touch the panels well

  • @photonic
    @photonic 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    You have almost no heat transfer between the pipe and the panel. It appears that most of the panel's cooling is coming from ambient air, which is why the temperature went up when you added the foam panel. You could probably do better by blowing air over the panel instead of messing with a water system. The water's going to eventually approach ambient temperature anyway, unless you have a larger pool. Some black spray paint on the back of the panel could also help it radiate heat better.
    If the humidity is low enough, you could try evaporative cooling. Build an enclosure on the back of the panel with an air inlet on one end and an outlet on the other. Add some baffles so the air has to meander around the panel instead of just blowing straight through. Put some wet material (like a swamp cooler pad) on the inlet, and use a fan to blow air through it.
    You should also consider collaborating with @NightHawkInLight.

    • @smashdaworld5916
      @smashdaworld5916 หลายเดือนก่อน

      1000% spray the back black and use black pex.

  • @thespencerowen
    @thespencerowen 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    Have you checked out the DualSun Spring solar panels? They are a commercial solar panel with water cooling

  • @AySz88
    @AySz88 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    Completely half-baked idea: aluminum sheets with a silicone/caulk "maze" (or zig zag) sandwiched between?

  • @yeanswers
    @yeanswers 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    The first test was so great didn't think you needed another but this is even better, great job

  • @Just_An_Idea_For_Consideration
    @Just_An_Idea_For_Consideration 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +51

    My Thoughts: Use the pvc drip system (from the prior video), and let the water run down the front of the solar panel, then let it drip off the bottom of the panel directly into the pool, but put a few feet above the pool so the water can dissipate some of the extra heat while falling through the air.

    • @MediumPointBallPoint
      @MediumPointBallPoint 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Absolutely !! Maybe a gutter system if the panel and pool are distant. Or a sprinkler on the backside above the pool. Maybe use something to seal the back into a chamber that could be filled with the water. This is a good idea, and simple enough that it should work.

    • @shyrwall0
      @shyrwall0 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      this is the standard setup for people doing this. pvc drip + gutter to tank, ball float valve in tank to add evaporated water and back to the pvc drip.@@MediumPointBallPoint

    • @theElderberryFarmer
      @theElderberryFarmer 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      It will be necessary to re-fill the reservoir to account for evaporation loss as well. A simple float valve system using off-the-shelf toilet parts could be used for proof-of-concept purposes.
      Take care and God Bless.

    • @WorldChampInfinity
      @WorldChampInfinity 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ☝️ Yeah, this comment and the replies under it. Do this.👍

    • @andrewt9204
      @andrewt9204 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I thought of this too, and like someone said a gutter and reservoir with an autofill float system. Add a spin-down and mesh filter for easy sediment removal. This would also have the benefit of washing the panels.
      I'd hook the make-up water from an RO filter setup to keep mineral deposits from building up as there will be a lot of evaporation.

  • @Pillazo
    @Pillazo 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Dude I like your experiments! Was interesting to watch even though it didn't work out quite well. Keep up the good work!

  • @rocktman81
    @rocktman81 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Liking these experiments. Keep up the good work!

  • @fofopads4450
    @fofopads4450 12 วันที่ผ่านมา

    This channel is great by showing what not to do, like using insulating polymer tubing to transfer heat. You are almost there man!

  • @KennethLongcrier
    @KennethLongcrier 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    If run correctly (In a zig-zag pattern from bottom to top,) you should be able to use Natural Circulation to induce flow from bottom to top instead of running a pump.

  • @DunOpondo
    @DunOpondo 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    That was alot of work for this video, you did great, always learning anew.
    Awesome 👍🏿

    • @everydaysolar
      @everydaysolar  9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thanks for the support!

  • @shelley131
    @shelley131 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Your tests were not failures you found out what works and what does not. I was thinking instead of using the pool water create a loop by using a cooler full of water and ice and run it through the pex tubing. The water will definitely be a lot colder than the ambient temperature outside.

  • @maximeboissonneault6203
    @maximeboissonneault6203 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    In addition, with a pump system, you should also consider how much power the pump uses during the experiment.

    • @everydaysolar
      @everydaysolar  9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Totally agree, thanks for the feedback.

    • @reinoud6377
      @reinoud6377 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      A bigger pump would help. Is the entire hose filled with coolant water?

    • @speedracer9132
      @speedracer9132 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@reinoud6377agreed, the flow wasn’t enough to serve as a good radiator

    • @SnowingNapalm
      @SnowingNapalm 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Small aquarium fountain pump vampire ing just a small amount of power to run the liquid cooling with your radiator in the shade not the sun would help basically only turning pool into a heatsink same as attaching aluminum fins to panel backside but you gotta flow it somewhere too maybe try a small pc fan to blow air from bottom corner to diagonal top corner for air cooling with your foam insulation and then get better contact with liquid cooling for comparison see which is more efficient vampire power maybe working as well as with no cooling or 2x efficient idk you'll have to let me know

    • @SnowingNapalm
      @SnowingNapalm 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Also only fair comparison is if both pump and fan are using same amount of watts of vampire power from the panels being used probably need 2 speed controller's 1 for pump one for fan and set dial to same wattage use😊

  • @BruceNLee
    @BruceNLee 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Try 2 changes: 1) more loops behind the panels - as much pex as you can fit back there. 2) use heat conductive FOIL TAPE - the entire length of the pex to increase the surface area in contact with the PV panel. In radiant floor systems, pex is laid in aluminum channels to improve heat transfer. Use this principle in YOUR experiment. I've been thinking about this very principle to see if I can create free hot water in winter for my radiant floor system. Do a Trial 3, and let us know how it turns out. If you get good results, try using a pump with a higher flow rate. Good Luck!

  • @castletown999
    @castletown999 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +37

    Your first test was not a failure! It showed that the panel needs to cool itself from the back. You prevented that by adding the insulation turning the panel into a solar oven. So given that panels do cool themselves from the back, try painting the back of the panels flat black. Even without any water you should see an increase in output because of the black-body radiation from the back.

    • @WorldChampInfinity
      @WorldChampInfinity 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Nah, that would make it hotter.

    • @markburton5292
      @markburton5292 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@WorldChampInfinity flat black on the back may actually help since black has been shown to radiate better. if the paint is thin it wont really add any insulating value. now do I know for sure no, that's why you have a theory and then test and observe. that is the basis of science.

    • @solarcabin
      @solarcabin 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      No do not paint the panel backs black and that would cause more heat absorbed through and behind the panels. The panels backsheet is white polymer and specifically designed to reduce radiates and conducted heat.
      You are defeating the purpose by insulating and blocking air flow to the back of those panels and will cause the cells to fail prematurely. Solar panels are designed to have air flow behind the panels to cool them down.
      If you want to increase cooling you should increase that air flow and decrease surface conduction heat.
      Try placing a small solar fan blowing under the panels or placing the panels on a white or reflective surface instead of a dark surface and test the difference.
      That is why panels on a roof is a bad idea and a ground mount system stays cooler and there is more air flow and you are not getting conduction and radiated heat from a hot shingle roof.
      Keep thinking!

    • @ChristianStJulian
      @ChristianStJulian 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      You can't negate the heat the pump itself is adding to the water. You really need a third pool with only the pump running

  • @Just_An_Idea_For_Consideration
    @Just_An_Idea_For_Consideration 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    NOTE - I love these experiments!!!

  • @MrAgility888
    @MrAgility888 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I love how scientific this channel is - experimenting to see what is the best setup. What if you built a set up like in your first video and collected the water as it ran off the solar panel and moved it back into the pool?

  • @boxs
    @boxs 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Can you compare the temperature of two panels, one connected to the load and the other not connected (open circuit)

  • @dancronin5513
    @dancronin5513 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Nice job. Really enjoy the measured approach you use for the experiments. Have you thought of just using a small DC fan to blow air from the shade under the panel across the bottom of the panel? Maybe see if placing on the grass vice the concrete driveway? Look forward to your next attempt. Thanks for making and sharing these.

  • @mikekuhlman8009
    @mikekuhlman8009 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    By opting for hydro coils instead of a drip system you switched from a really good cooling strategy (evaporative) to a really good heating strategy. Coils will work great for keeping the pool warm, but they will never work for cooling the panels no matter how well you insulate them. With how much UV radiation those panels are getting, insulating the back just turns the panel into a heat battery.
    The only way the insulated hydro strategy MAYBE works is if the pump pushes water from the pool to an underground reservoir big enough to absorb the 80+ degree water, cools it to around 55 degrees geo-thermal style, and THEN gets pushed to the panel. That temp differential should suck a bunch of heat out and equalize to around 80 degrees by the time water reaches the pool.
    But, that would be a monstrous investment, so evaporative cooling is the way to go for the panels. I would try to run the next experiment with the drip setup, but then have a water reclamation strategy where the warm water that doesn't evaporate gets deposited into something that routes to the pool. Also, you should semi-shade the kiddie pools. The UV heat they're getting makes it harder for this experiment to be applicable for folks with larger, in-ground pools since they wouldn't heat up as quickly in sunlight.
    Side note if you go this route, there will have to be a way for larger systems to add city water as the drip water evaporates over time. Probably something like a float switch somewhere along the pool-to-panel line with a hose hookup.

  • @Absfor30
    @Absfor30 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Maybe a heatsink would perform better, by insulating the rear of the panel you are trapping in heat that would normally transfer to the air, also you need to ensure more surface area contact between the pipe and the back of the panel, micro copper tubing and heatsink compound would be required to improve the system you have right there.

  • @SleekDiamond41
    @SleekDiamond41 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    It would be interesting to compare a passive heat sink version, or even a heat sink with a small fan.
    If it’s useful, the fan could be set to turn off on windy days, so it only runs when needed.

  • @cygnus2866
    @cygnus2866 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I wonder if you would get better heat transfer into the pex using heat transfer plates like what are used for radiant heat flooring?

  • @bobhilder1469
    @bobhilder1469 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    May I suggest you look into thermosiphon systems. Usually they are used simply for water heating but maybe you can get rid of the solar thermal "collector" and replace it with solar PV and somehow channel water directly on the back of the PV. What's great about them is there's no pump required. The downside is the tank/pool of water needs to be above the solar panels! I believe Solahart was one of the original companies that made thermosiphon solar water heaters for home use.

  • @scollyb
    @scollyb 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    You might try Aluminium box section. Much better heat conductor and more contact area. In fact it might improve things without water. Just the greater thermal mass and cross section. It would improve against with a fan blowing air through it
    Also look at thermal tape to connect it

  • @thespencerowen
    @thespencerowen 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Great video! I’m looking at both solar and solar heater for my pool. I’ve been wondering about combining them into 1 system

  • @robotoverlord6969
    @robotoverlord6969 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Awesome, thanks for running these tests. I don't think you truly appreciate how efficient what you just made is though. A 4 F increase of 60 gallons is 586wh, that's 82% more energy than the non cooled panel when the heat is added in.

  • @ericheft6184
    @ericheft6184 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    You could make a giant "CPU water block" for the back side of the panel. Feed water in from the top and make it take multiple paths under the panel to transfer directly to the water. I also like the suggestion of going back to your first test and just collecting the water after it has traveled over the panel to pump it back over the panel. The temp of the water coming from the hose is going to be a lot colder than water that has been sitting in the sun.

  • @terrysystems
    @terrysystems 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    You identified the first issue: Pex does not have the thermal efficiency of copper. Any metal would be better. The reason the water cooled the panel in the first test is that water was in direct contact with a surface (glass) that was efficient at transferring heat to the water. If you do the first test and have it drain into the pool, you would likely get a better result, even if loosing more water to evaporation. .
    The overall problem using this system is that you are having to use energy to pump the water through. Can it save enough energy to supply the energy needed to pump? The first test was getting "Free" energy in that the pumping was already paid for, but even there you are still paying for pumping at the utility.

  • @MrAngryrooster
    @MrAngryrooster 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    what about a combination of your first test and this one? water can flow over the top but drain into the pool with same pump setup.

  • @yevheniilysenko8306
    @yevheniilysenko8306 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Interesting video. Thanks for the test. You can try a square ABS or PP pipe, there will be a much higher contact and you can try to cover the back of the panel evenly. They will just work as microchannels and remove heat.

  • @johntate5284
    @johntate5284 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    These videos are great! Ultimately, 1/4" copper tubing has several advantages. Make a radiator type pattern by using a 1/4" tubing bender and make those 180 degree bends. Do not use one pass. Instead use several parallel passes. Using the wood to press the plastic tubing is great and doesn't result in any permanent changes to the panel, so use the same approach with the copper tubing with the addition of some thermal coupling compound (like you put on a new CPU when coupling it to the cooler) along as much of the copper tubing. Apply this once the tubing is in place. Although more expensive than your trial methods, still probably less than $50 per panel. Lastly, the fountain pump is a very weak link. Looking at your previous video, where you went thru 130 gallons, Which ever DC pump you choose, it should be closer to that 130 GPH as your fountain pump is probably on 7.5 GPH. I look forward to your next video in the series!

    • @ssteele1812
      @ssteele1812 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I agree with all of this but feel i should add that the flow rate of the coolant and the thermal transfer rate will be related. flowing too fast will inhibit the ability of the copper to transfer the heat from the panel to the water. a series of flow rate tests would be needed. The cooling systems used in computers and such use a relatively slow flow rate for this reason.

  • @MikeH-sg2ue
    @MikeH-sg2ue 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Always ask yourself many questions!
    I liked your first experiment
    with this with the long shower head you made.
    If you had a thin aluminum side wall
    running down each side of the solar panel
    to keep the water from wasting over the side,
    then mount the end over the pool, so as to catch it.
    I feel, that at first it would make a great deal of difference,
    but as the pool water heats up,
    it would become less efficient.
    Maybe a larger pool?
    I made a solar water heater
    for my 12’ inflatable pool a few years ago.
    It worked well, & the pool was enjoyed,
    while it lasted.
    I still have the solar water heater,
    but the pool deflated itself,
    & is no longer with us!
    Keep your smiles on!

  • @Kfrankie46
    @Kfrankie46 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I think a higher flow pump and different material of hose that has less insulating properties would have much better results, I don't know if it would have enough of an effect to overcome the power usage of the pump though

  • @canyondan
    @canyondan 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    you might want to shade the pools and use some type of heat transfer past to attach the pex. However, I would check to make sure that the heat transfer paste is easily removed. Very interesting experimentation videos Thanks

  • @thehastywombat
    @thehastywombat 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I watched your first trial and thought it was an interesting concept.
    On the weekend I was adding another solar panel to the setup on my roof of my van and decided to hose down panels once Id finished. I saw a much more substantial rise then your first test - a 25% rise in Watts! Simply from hosing down the panels. This effect subsided over about half an hour in 32c temps.
    I'm sure a AIO cooled solution much like you can get for CPU's and GPU's would produce some pretty excellent results.

    • @everydaysolar
      @everydaysolar  6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thanks for the feedback, I am thinking through a few more cooling options for next summer and computer fans will be an option but probably just starting with airflow to pull some heat from the back surface. I appreciate the feedback 👍

  • @AdamDeLay07
    @AdamDeLay07 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very interesting follow up video!
    I wonder if you had a stronger pump to move more water if that would help. That and as you noted a thiner pipe to help dissipate the heat better (not sure what that might be that's cost efficient though). Another thing that I did see mentioned before was you need to take into account the power used to run the pump.

  • @JeromeDemers
    @JeromeDemers 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    you could use 1in+ aluminium extrusion the length of the panel found in hardware store. You drill the bottom and top and cap the end. Then you stack them the entire width of the panel with silicone. The water pass through the bottom and go to the top, then to next aluminum channel but down to the other channel that will go up. Make sure you apply a thermal interface material (TIM) inserted between aluminium and panel. that remove all air bubble and surface defect. I know you are saying that is overkill, well yes, it's proper engineering, it require work. if you save 5%+ for the next 20 years, it will pay off!

  • @TheLophius
    @TheLophius 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Maybe try double wall polycarbonate panels they would make a good contact with back of panel and pump water inside the walls you would need to make some kind of connector to split water in to all channels.

  • @raphaelrosenhagen5624
    @raphaelrosenhagen5624 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Interesting test. I have a question on this. You used a fountain pump to push the water through the tube. How much energy do you consume on this? Just to be able to calculate the improvement a little better.

  • @segwaydave
    @segwaydave 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have always wondered why people are not doing this! Now I know! Thank you!

  • @alphastarcar
    @alphastarcar 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I’m now a new subscriber to your channel! I’ve watched a few of your videos and I like your theory and testing methods. I look forward to seeing more of your content!
    BTW, I just set up a small 12V 400 watt panel system which has a 400 AH capacity as a grid down emergency system. I’ll see what type of results I get from it over time. I did install a PV combiner box several safety switches for both the panels and batteries and I’m using a 40 A Epever Mppt charge controller. My inverter is a large Vevor pure sine wave at 5KW continuous / 10KW surge but I will probably purchase a smaller converter to use on this system so that I don’t have as much stand by power waste. Thanks again for sharing your findings!

    • @everydaysolar
      @everydaysolar  23 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Nice little system you have going 🙌. My favorite part of building a DIY system is the ability to grow over time to fit your need/use case.

  • @billbaumea3420
    @billbaumea3420 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    try to spread water system with a 4 x 4 on the end of the bottom solar panels with a gutter to catch the water and return it to the pool however you’d like.

  • @onecrazywheel
    @onecrazywheel 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I live in Central Florida. I have a 2500 watt solar panel system. Man it makes sense to actually use pex pipe stuck to the bottom side of the solar PV panels to gain heat with an inline pump to a water heater to get free water heating. I was even looking into Heliatos Solar panels for water heating but this may be a whole lot cheaper for water heating. Great video. I know you're looking to cool off the panels but use that picked up heat from the PV for the water heater!
    Jeff - Sunny Central Florida

  • @charleselertii6187
    @charleselertii6187 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Hi. I have investigated using 1/2 inch black irrigation tubing in a spiral coil for a DIY pool solar water heater. If there is any air in the system, the differential pressure between inlet water pressure and outlet water pressure is AMPLIFIED greatly if the coils are not absolutely level. Thus, any tilt to collector will substantially increase differential pressure, affecting pump flow efficiency, and therefore performance.
    Hence, solar pool water heaters are designed to be header-riser configuration and not spiral coil loops, cuz of tilt.
    Geothermal systems buried in ground do okay with loops because they are laid basically flat and they have a lot more contact surface with the earth.
    Chuck in Florida.

  • @DavidCheok
    @DavidCheok 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Should be using black piping for better absorption of heat.

  • @MegaCyrik
    @MegaCyrik 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Appreciate the effort. Please do use a cheap small diameter copper tube, stick it on large thin metal plate sheet, alu, tin, something, the size or close to, of the backside, please use thermal compound between everything, thin layer, like on a cpu or it will be a failure. Especially between pipe and plate/sheet. Please do not add insulation, we dont want an oven lol
    Love your vids. Thanks!

  • @charlieodom9107
    @charlieodom9107 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Coat the back of the panels with small finned heat sinks and blow a fan across the fins.

  • @farside87
    @farside87 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I saw somewhat the same experiment from India. They had submerged the panel in water to keep it cool.

  • @richardr3847
    @richardr3847 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Thank you for your time and commitment to get results between the cooled and non-cooled solar panel. Out of curiosity, on a roof mounted system, the roof would produce heat from under the solar panel. Would that make more of a difference between the cooled vs the non-cooled panel?

  • @Glenn.Cooper
    @Glenn.Cooper 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    This was really interesting. I watched your other video on dripping water on the surface. I'm guessing that worked better due to evaporative cooling. Seems like the water cooling idea probably isn't worth it. Thanks for the videos!!

    • @kimmer6
      @kimmer6 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The panel would scale up in no time. Too much trouble.

  • @brentftaylor
    @brentftaylor 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Another Great video. I get about a 10% gain whether I spray the front or the the back. I also have eight 100 panels wired in series. I wonder if being in series has a cumulative affect. Also mine are on grass and you might be getting some radiated heat off the concrete. You might try wiring the two panels in series and testing it that way

  • @AySz88
    @AySz88 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I was thinking some sort of rudimentary plastic welding with thin sheets (like you see with vacuum seal bags). Not sure what sort of path / maze would be best for the fluid, though. A single path might restrict the flow too much, but multiple paths is a hard design challenge.

    • @michiganengineer8621
      @michiganengineer8621 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Not really if you want to keep it fairly simple. Just narrow parallel paths from "manifolds" at the top and bottom with the inlet(s) at the bottom up to either a single or double outlet at the top. The tricky parts would be getting a good water tight seal between the film for the manifold and the water fittings, as well as making sure you have good bonding to the back of the solar panel.

  • @shaunhamilton
    @shaunhamilton 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I have been considering doing something exactly like this for my panels, but I was going to use garden hose.
    After watching this, I think it might be better to create a reservoir under each panel pumping water into the top, and out the bottom.
    Think "gluing a tupperware dish to the underside of your panel", and running enough water through it to keep the actual underside coated in flowing water.

    • @fleeflng
      @fleeflng หลายเดือนก่อน

      Well the hotter water gets, the lighter it becomes. Pumping from the top to the bottom would not make much sense then. In fact a pump may not be needed at all, just let gravity do the work.

  • @ZoeyR86
    @ZoeyR86 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have something like this already.
    Simple sch 20 pvc. I have 1in input at the top and 1in exit at the bottom on both. All the back of the panel I have 1 vertical run of 1/2 pvc behind each vertical row of cells. O fill the lines with water to weigh them down and poured a 1/2 layer of mold making rubber mixed 2:1 with graphite.
    Another option is the flexible grout using radiant floor heating and maybe just using a lot of 1/4 aluminum tubing between the top and bottom bulkhead

  • @Nosjamesmenzer
    @Nosjamesmenzer 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    So your videos have not only given me a added idea to try something like what you have done but instead of just letting the water run down to the ground or in a pool my thought is to get a ease through and have it at the bottom of the solar panels and then run a hose from there in to a water collection container so it can be spray back on there to keep the panels cooled down and and the same thought could be used during winter with windshield deicer to keep the solar panels clear of the ice and snow plus you could set up both system to integrate in to home assistant to be able to control the system with automations and make it to the point were you can shut the pump off when its not needed to run

    • @everydaysolar
      @everydaysolar  9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Sounds like a interesting setup. Join the Facebook Group (same name) and share the setup once you get it up and running.

  • @martingargas3217
    @martingargas3217 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What about mounting the panel over the edge of the pool and running the water across the face?

  • @awesomedee5421
    @awesomedee5421 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What about a darker color pex as opposed to the white pex? obvi the copper is going to be better. Is the Al frame getting hot that it needs the pex covering that too? and what about just a PC fan blowing air on the back without the PEX?

  • @sonictech1000
    @sonictech1000 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Several comments mentioned aluminum plates used for radiant floor heating. I thought they'd be expensive but but they aren't, maybe $2 for a 4 foot long by 4 inch wide section and are designed specifically to transfer heat from pex to a flat surface.

  • @tonyprebensen1527
    @tonyprebensen1527 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thanks for saving me the trouble of going down this path. The easiest / cheapest solution is, of course, to put 5% more panels in the system and accept the inefficiencies. .But that is no fun. Keep inventing

    • @everydaysolar
      @everydaysolar  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yep, the practical solution is definitely add more panels. I am just looking for an excuse to get an pool 😂

    • @mtar3741
      @mtar3741 18 วันที่ผ่านมา

      If you want a cheap pool heater....look into FPH(free Pool Heat). It is a heat exchanger that goes inline with your pool pump and Air conditioning and takes the heat out of your house and dumps it in the pool. No extra energy used. It turns off the outdoor air exchange and redirects the hit refrigerant to an exchanger loop with pool water.

  • @andryjohn
    @andryjohn 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thanks for sharing this experiment! Something that I would be curious to measure is the temperature of the back of the solar panel?
    Besides the pipe having a small surface area and the water flow rate being significantly lower than the drip test... The temperature differential between the 'warm' pool water running in the pipe, and the back side of the solar panel, is likely smaller than the temperature differential of the tap water and the hot surface on the front of the panel. Reducing the cooling power of this set-up.

  • @brazil7028
    @brazil7028 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You could use one of those really flexible hoses that are basically flat till you put water pressure to them. Tape it in a loop so it lays flat with no water in it and then most of the contact surface should be touching the back of the panel. Either that or enclose the back of the panel with something that is water tight and put inlet and outlet connections so the water is drawn in one end and out the other so you have complete contact.

  • @luckyjim51
    @luckyjim51 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Are large solar farms water cooled..? I saw a video where a guy in canada was taking the heat off to warm his home. using a solar passive system.

  • @BODETHEKILLER
    @BODETHEKILLER 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Awesome test! I would like to see the inflow pool be shaded kinda like if you had a pool in the front yard and back yard. One of them should be shaded half the day

  • @ivosimovic5258
    @ivosimovic5258 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Maybe you can close the back of the panel with a watertight plate. Seal the complete panel and let water run in from the bottom and out on the top. Like this you have direct contact between the water and the panel.

  • @hc8714
    @hc8714 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    i wonder if you really max the conduction by bonding copper foil with thermo paste on the entire back panel then bond copper tubes on op the same way will it see a real difference

  • @redhat421
    @redhat421 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It's super awesome that you published the negative result! We don't do that nearly enough IMO.

  • @kimmer6
    @kimmer6 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I thought about mounting the panels about 6 inches above the shed roof with a pressure treated wood frame that sits on a waterproof vinyl membrane like they install under shower pans to collect water at the low end. Install a grid of drip mist sprayers aimed at the back side of the solar panels and allow the water to flow into a gutter then into a collection pond like the kiddy pool you are using. Use an RV 12 volt water system pump to provide the spray pressure with a cheap whole house filter to keep the nozzles clean. Putting water to the back side of the panels avoids the scale buildup like wetting the collector surface.
    Last Summer I noted an additional 47 watts output from 800 watt rated panels when I hosed them off at mid day. Normal max output in my installation is about 610 watts but it was nice to watch output jack up to 657 watts when I washed them down. I use a Windex window cleaner hose attached sprayer to clean my panels when they are in the shade. Dishwasher spot free detergent crystals work as well. But alas....want more power, install more panels and don't bother cooling them. They all suck during low angle sunlight and the short days of Winter.

  • @Scenic_Boom
    @Scenic_Boom 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Which panels were you using for this test? I currently have 2 EcoFlow 400W Portable Panels and feel like they're a bit too cumbersome to keep setting up.

    • @everydaysolar
      @everydaysolar  8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      These are Heliene 360W.

  • @jsmythib
    @jsmythib 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have always wanted to try coiling up hose on the inside and using it to heat water. I know it would work, but to a what degree? :) Thankyou for the testing, it was exactly what I wanted to find :)

  • @reinoud6377
    @reinoud6377 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Have you tried an array of simple cheap fans blowing on the back of the panels?

  • @c567591
    @c567591 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What about a smaller hose coupled tightly to the panel over a longer length? Paint underside white? Paint underside black? Fan blowing under panels?

  • @schadlarry
    @schadlarry 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I'm impressed with your creativity in these tests. I grew up in IL but think solar in that state is a bit of a stretch. I think you'd really have to over panel and much more battery capacity. Come to the Southwest, we got more solar than you would know what to do with. Water not so much. Cheap property taxes too.

  • @JeffKoenig
    @JeffKoenig 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Just put the panel in the pool if it is waterproof?

  • @hu5116
    @hu5116 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Nice video. Problem is that your uncooled panel is convectively cooling more efficiently than your water cooling is doing likely because PEX is a very good insulator, which is not what you want for heat transfer. You would need to back it with a true copper cooler panel, or other form of efficient cooling exchanger.

  • @steelnstuff
    @steelnstuff 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have always wondered if I put a fan on the lower side of my Solar array if it would cool down the panels enough to make a difference. I was thinking like a Squirrel Cage fan ducted into a PVC pipe that was vented under each panel just to move the air up and out.

  • @theephemeralglade1935
    @theephemeralglade1935 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Cool experiment. If you had a giant array of panels, close to the ground it might (?), makes sense. Having a pump that can move enough water, quickly enough is really going to eat into any gains. Alternatively, you could use copper, or otherwise make more cooling available at the back of the panel... But, that is going to get REAL expensive.

  • @mondotv4216
    @mondotv4216 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

    You nailed the problem. Plasic is great if you want to absorb radiated heat and it's coloured black (hence the swimming pool solar heaters that are made of thin tubes (a lot of surface area) polypropylene. While they're great at absorbing radiated heat, they're pretty bad at conducting heat which is what you want for your application. One thing you could try is sealing the edge of the inside of a panel with silicone between the aluminium rail and the backing and then adding watertight fittings to your inlet and outlet and then sealing the back of your panel with a waterproof seal like perspex sealed with silicone. That way the water is directly in contact with the back of the panel. The inlet would have to be at the top and outlet at the bottom otherwise I think you'd risk getting a thermocline and some water not cycling through. You couldn't really use that system for a proper swimming pool because salt and/or chlorine are pretty corrosive but it would be an interesting test. Tech Ingredients ran interesting test with an aluminium heat sink and fans. I'm not sure how the Dualsun panels are constructed but it's a solved problem.

  • @gideonlapidus8996
    @gideonlapidus8996 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    how about using black pool water heating pvc sheets they install on roof for pool heating

  • @danmurray4594
    @danmurray4594 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I watched the videos last evening.
    First question: which side (Front/back) is warmer? (I suspect the front). That said the largest delta-T will always (all other things being equal) have the largest heat transfer.
    Surface area matters (contact-wise). Use AIR.
    Close the back to create a chamber that is as deep as the frame. Seal the sides. The resulting box/chamber will get HOT. but we wont let that happen. at the TOP rail, create a penetration. the larger the better. That penetration should be used to hold a standard fitting (perhaps a 3/4" or 1" PVC nipple.) Repeat the process at the BOTTOM of the panel.
    Heat rises. Natural processes WILL cause air to be sucked in the bottom nipple, and exhaust from the top. but thats not good enough. use a flexible hose (garden is fine) to connect to the inlet and outlet at the panel to the wading ponds. at that point transition to copper pipe. the longer the better. a manifold (radiator) would be best. submerge the pipe/manifold/radiator in the pool. the heat will go from the heated air, across the copper pipe wall to the water, cooling the pipe and the air flowing thru it.
    This is just natural convection/circulation. It works ( at least on Nuclear Reactors. -- i know from first hand experience). It would be a major improvement to have a small plenum inline with the hose that contains a small fan to help move the air faster. This would dramatically improve performance. Small Fans like www.amazon.com/dp/B075V3BYR7 have Airflow: 9.5CFM each. and run on 12VDC drawing 2.8W MAX each. One fan should be enough to force at least one complete 'air change' in the created underpanel "box" per minute, maybe more, forcing a perverbial ton of cool air across the entire surface area of the panel.
    Benefit: Less overall piping, Much simpler design, no concern of pipes behind the solar panel leaking water onto any electrical components (its all dry air) and most important is the the surface area interface is massively larger than even the spray bar on thesurface, since in that case only the actual drop/glass contact area counts.

    • @everydaysolar
      @everydaysolar  7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thanks for all the great feedback. Next summer I will be doing some additional tests and the air chamber idea is a leading contender. 👍

  • @MFunkibut
    @MFunkibut 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Can water touch the back of the panel? Because even copper tubes only touch some percentage of the back...enclose the entire back such that a thin layer of water touches EVERYWHERE.

  • @DuanePolega
    @DuanePolega 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Shouldn’t the pump be powered by the inverter?

    • @everydaysolar
      @everydaysolar  9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      You could but in this case if we made a power gain you should technically take off the pump power draw.

  • @joeblow1942
    @joeblow1942 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What if you got rid of the pools and sprayed the bottom of the panels in a continuous loop?

  • @andrewmollmann5311
    @andrewmollmann5311 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You should try warmboard. It's a product designed to distribute in floor radiant heat. I has an aluminum face and channels for the PEX built in.

  • @pmaragoudakis
    @pmaragoudakis 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Put a small tray of water on the floor under the panel. Just the cooling effect of evaporation will have a big effect. Bonus that it is easy to setup and passive. No need for a pump (which whenever included should have its consumption measured to know if it adds or subtracts from the energy gained).

  • @pangentleman1789
    @pangentleman1789 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What to choose i got a calculation in spain for 5kW with instalation
    10x tensite 6k
    12 longi 8.5k
    Tensite Monocritalino PERC 500 W
    VS
    LONGi Hi-MO5m 66HPH-G2 510W

  • @mikecaster4612
    @mikecaster4612 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have 2 solutions for you, one simple and one harder and more complex. The first solution is just to drop your solar panel into the pool. The panel will always be cool because the water will always dissipate all the heat. The second solution is to make the solar panel waterproof and fill the back with water. Seal the back with sheet metal, to contain the weight of the water and use angle aluminum to support the metal back. Add hose connectors to the top and bottom to circulate the water to the pool. So instead of tubing (any kind) you fill the solar panel with water and if you use aluminum sheet with angle stock - you might not need the pool.

  • @johnsnell1929
    @johnsnell1929 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I think you pretty well got it at the very end - Pex doesn't xfer heat too well, and low contact area / poor contact to the back of the panel. Another issue I would investigate: what is the back of the panel made of? If it is aluminum, then ok, but if its fiberglass or any other variation of plastic, heat xfer thru that is already compromised there.
    My suggestions:
    1) If the panel backing is aluminum itself (or any metal that has good heat transfer), use a metal tubing on the back instead of anything plastic-based. Yes, I know it'll be pricier... but it doesn't have to be copper - you should find a less expensive small aluminum tubing that is flexible enough.
    2) Use a heatsink compound / thermal transfer paste or glue between the tubing and panel. Even with a good metal tubing, the point where it contacts the panel surface is so small, you need to give it as good of a contact quality that you can. (Square tubing would be great! But STILL use thermal compound even so...)
    3) Try to distribute the cooling as evenly across the back as you can - if some cells don't get cooled as well, their internal resistance can still inhibit improvements gained by the rest of them.
    4) If the panel backing is NOT a good, heat-conductive, aluminum or other metal, then you have a lot more to overcome - you will need to provide much more complete coverage of the back to effectively cool it:
    4A) Use a piece of aluminum sheet metal cut to just fit inside the back of the panel, right against the back surface. Use thermal conductive paste over the whole surface so that the whole panel back area can transfer its heat better to YOUR aluminum back that it SHOULD have had, then add the tubing to THAT, as above. The idea here is you need to pull heat from a much more complete surface area to make up for the poor transfer from a non-metallic backing.
    4B) Alternatively, you could basically turn the back of the panel into a thin water tank by making sure all corners and edges are well sealed and adding a backing to it, sealed all around the edges of the panel, and put intake and outlet ports on it for water to flow in & out. This way, the water itself is in full contact with the back of the panel, with no gaps, giving good transfer and good coverage. The problem with this, is that the panel probably isn't constructed for this type of use, and could be a risk of water infiltration to the cells and wiring, so is not a good idea for an actual installation, but should be ok for experimentation if the panel isn't high voltage, and you are carful!
    5) You COULD extend the original idea and run water down the front of the panel, but do a similar water "tank" idea to 4B, but on the front, using clear glass to contain it. The problem here, though, is the added cover glass may lose more light on it's way to the panel than you gain by cooling it.
    Just my ideas for it, FWIW...

  • @orion8385
    @orion8385 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This is just my two cents, but...
    PEX will never work as it does not make enough thermal contact with the cells to make a difference. Water absorbs heat like a champ so use it better. Seal off the bottom of the panel. Use glass or plastic or metal , it will not matter. Make it water tight. Some people will say to use baffles to direct the water but in this situation it's not needed. Be sure to make the inlet bung orifice larger than the exit bung and since the panels are angled, have the exit bung at the bottom. Drill a hole for a vent valve at the top for a valve to vent the air pocket that may develop. The pump only needs to be powerful enough to just move the water. You need to move enough water to remove 160 watts of heat from your 200 watt panel. You might need a larger pool but you can experiment with that.
    Realize that using water is the worst for long term usage, oil would be preferable.

  • @Mr1DANBOY
    @Mr1DANBOY 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I remember seeing a aluminum pieces that the pex snaps into for using it as a floor heating to add to existing wood flooring under it is to radiate heat out into the floor it would do the same in reverse on the panels I believe.

    • @Mr1DANBOY
      @Mr1DANBOY 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      th-cam.com/video/lW8anGNxtis/w-d-xo.htmlsi=gum2rAjpA4EZD0iL

  • @samm3980
    @samm3980 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Whether the material of choice is copper, PEX, aluminum, etc, I wonder how a system might perform if the back of the panel was covered in as many vertical tubes as possible, with manifolds at the top and bottom of the panel. Rather than a constant flow, a solenoid would control a valve at the outlet of the bottom manifold. The valve could be set to open at prescribed times or based off the temperature of the contained fluid. A system of this type would allow the water to absorb the heat over more time and also reduce the need for high flow rates, as the system of pipes can refill as slowly as your water supply will allow (say if you are running a small solar pump from a pool, rainwater barrel, well, etc). It might also use less power compared to constantly pumping.

  • @shimzard
    @shimzard 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

    As in PC cooling, you need to define an efficient water flow ratio, and wait until temperature equilibrium is reached in which the temp of the pool is saturated and then run the test comparing both solar panels.

  • @fookschool
    @fookschool 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    You should use pex-al-pex. It is way better at transferring heat and is cheap. But realistically you should seal the panel with mineral oil inside and run the PEX-al-PEX through it. That is the best way to pull from the entire surface area. Another option if you want to save money and time is to use aluminum across the back and sandwich the pex-al-pex between another layer of aluminum on top then insulate. By aluminum I mean even a thin layer like aluminum foil or possibly aluminum tape.

    • @everydaysolar
      @everydaysolar  9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thanks for the feedback, I appreciate the suggestions and help!

    • @AySz88
      @AySz88 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Filling the whole space with mineral oil might cause confounding with the thermal mass / specific heat of the oil before its temperature reaches an equilibrium.

    • @fookschool
      @fookschool 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@AySz88 what are you talking about? The heat would transfer to the mineral oil just fine and would move into the lower temperature pex al pex no problem. Transfer of heat through conduction works perfect that way. It also wouldn't freeze like water in the cavity would. There are a ton of reasons immersion cooling is done with the mineral oil instead of water directly.

    • @AySz88
      @AySz88 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@fookschool I mean that for short tests, you'd get an improvement with mineral oil alone without any cooling flow, simply because the oil will take time to warm. Just makes it harder to measure what we're actually intending to measure, even if not inherently bad in practice.

    • @fookschool
      @fookschool 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Well let's do the math to check. He is checking using a couple hours at a time. So let's assume these panels are about 1.5sq meters. @ 60% efficiency of heat capture, there is 900w of heat at full 1000w/sq meter. Once the cells warm up, the mineral oil temp would rise 219f/hr (0.4btu per degree f rise per lb estimating 5gal) if you didn't pull any of the heat out and had really good insulation encapsulating it. So within a few minutes of full sunlight, there should be enough temperature difference to transfer heat into the pex-al-pex. It needs to be direct full sun though. And there are definitely losses I am not putting in the calc

  • @huestifer
    @huestifer 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    We should figure out a way to laminate a sheet of poly film to the back of the panel and just use the back of the panel itself and create a pocket of water that is directly against the back of the panel. Then open a valve at the bottom edge of the pocket and let gravity drain the water out. Maybe even create a suction effect to draw more cold water. Another idea would be a passive loop that could contain a refrigerant since that will be very efficient at transferring the heat.

  • @MrFirstone23
    @MrFirstone23 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Perhaps devising a method using fans to constantly move air across the back of the panels would be more cost efficient and/or as efficient as copper coils or aluminum heat sinks. Solar panels tend to stay cooler when laying just a foot off the grass vs those mounted several feet above in a rack. That's counter to the above mentioned air movement suggestion. There must be a cooling effect due to the moisture evaporating from the grass. Maybe that cooling effect could be duplicated. Just some thoughts. Great videos!

    • @jeromewhelan6723
      @jeromewhelan6723 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I also like the idea of forced air cooling - the panel rises above ambient air because of heat absorption, so ambient air forced on the back might help to cool.

  • @z.Sh4ped.Po0Tin
    @z.Sh4ped.Po0Tin 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Top of the panel is where most of the heat goes, but there is also layer of glass which works as thermal insulator so it might not be worth the effort - solar cells would have to be cooled directly somehow.
    If you try to put additional transparent sheet (PET) glued to panel frame on top and let the water flow top to bottom between it and the panel it might cool it in more effective way but the additional layer might reflect more sunrays and you'd loose more energy reaching the solar cells than you loose because of temperature (and also pumping the water will use some energy and additional up-front cost for low power efficient pump).
    Maybe it would be better to simply retry with the top sprinkler and add a gutter on the bottom but then you'd also have to use pump which will also use some energy and water would have to be filtered and replenished (some water will evaporate but evaporation is good as it will cool down the panel surface alike perspiration).
    Water tanks (pools) should be in the shadow so water is not warmed by the sunrays much.
    BTW: If cooling bottom of a panel (EVA sheet which also works as thermal insulator) would affect energy yield much then panel producers would already offer option with cheap passive cooling radiators attached with thermal paste to cool it down.

  • @zer0nix
    @zer0nix 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Most of the systems that I have seen mist the surface with demineralized water (usually filtered rain water) and let evaporation provide the cooling. Add a low powered fan to blow hot air from the underside and that should help some. ...actually, I wonder if moving air from the top would work better in that case. ...actually you could try comparing between misting the surface vs the underside, with a fan blowing the top or the bottom or both...
    I mean if you want to run some tests, why not?
    EDIT: I'm a little surprised by how little the water cooling helped here. I wonder if it's because of the small amount of contact the tube is making.
    Alternatively, can the panels make contact with water? I wonder how they would do sitting directly on the surface of the water...

  • @kojakdurham
    @kojakdurham 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I said this on your other video, but will post it here as well. You should consider doing a project like the one you used the hose to spray down the front of the panels, but using a reservoir, rather than running the hose. The reservoir should heat up as the water goes over the panels, where it would collect at the bottom and get pumped back to the panel again. This way, the water would get heated, and evaporation would decrease the temperature. You could attach a hose using a float valve to keep the reservoir at a level you prefer. This way, you only lose water to evaporation.

  • @michaelmartin2989
    @michaelmartin2989 26 วันที่ผ่านมา

    use cooper under the panel and pex from panel to pool.
    use pex under the panel with heat transfer plates like we use in hydronic floor heating
    or use pex under the panel and fill the underside void with a lightweight gypsum concrete which is also a standard detail used for hydronic floor heating
    i would still insulate the underside

  • @DanBurgaud
    @DanBurgaud 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    4:15 "Something is wrong BATMAN!"