Abstract

Solar energy’s most promising application is in water heating, followed by other solar thermal applications. In this investigation, a novel method of incorporating a phase-change material (PCM) between the annulus space of an evacuated tube and an aluminum finned heat pipe is employed. During day time, the PCM stores the excess amount of heat and releases it in order to heat the flowing water during high-demand/insufficient solar radiation. This study aims to evaluate the detailed heat transfer assessment and energetic and exergetic efficiencies of the developed PCM-integrated solar water heater in both clear and cloudy weather conditions at 20 LPH. The outcomes of the study found that the maximum useful amounts of energy collected daily for the clear and cloudy days were 10.65 MJ and 8.52 MJ, respectively, whereas temperatures of the stored water were found to be 45.2 °C and 41.4 °C on the next day at 6:00 a.m. for the corresponding days. The daily energetic and exergetic outputs of the designed system were 76.57% and 79.64%, and 2.37% and 1.38%, respectively, at fixed mass flow rate for the clear and cloudy day conditions. The overall heat transfer coefficients (UL) for both days were 0.75 and 0.72 W/m2 K, respectively. The findings show that the proposed system overcomes the issue of overheated heat pipes and can provide hot water even in cloudy/low-sunshine conditions.

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