Abstract

We describe a mathematical model for the optical and thermal performance of non-evacuated CPC solar collectors with a cylindrical absorber, when the heat loss coefficient is temperature-dependent. Detailed energy balance at the absorber, reflector and cover of the CPC cavity yields heat losses as a function of absorber temperature and solar radiation level. Using a polynomial approximation of those heat losses, we calculate the thermal efficiency of the CPC collector. Numerical results show that the performance of the solar collector ( η vs. Δ T f(0)/ I coll) is given by a set of curves, one for each radiation level. Based on the solution obtained to express the collector performance, we propose to plot efficiency against the relation of heat transfer coefficients at absorber input and under stagnation conditions. The set of characteristic curves merge, then, into a single curve that is not dependent on the solar radiation level. More conveniently, linearized single plots are obtained by expressing efficiency against the square of the difference between the inlet fluid temperature and the ambient temperature divided by the solar radiation level. The new way of plotting solar thermal collector efficiency, such that measurements for a broad range of solar radiation levels can be unified into a single curve, enables us to represent the performance of a large class of solar collectors, e.g. flat plate, CPC and parabolic troughs, whose heat loss functions are well represented by second degree polynomials.

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