화학공학소재연구정보센터
Solar Energy, Vol.58, No.4, 213-217, 1996
Gas heat conduction in an evacuated tube solar collector
We investigated experimentally the pressure dependency of the gas heat conduction in an evacuated plate-in-tube solar collector. A stationary heat loss experiment was built up with an electrically heated real-size collector model. The gas pressure was varied from 10(-3) to 10(4) Pa, the temperatures of the absorber and the casing were held at 150 degrees C (electrical heaters) and 30 degrees C (water cooling), respectively. Losses by radiation and solid conduction were determined experimentally at pressures below 0.1 Pa. At higher pressures these background losses were subtracted from the total heat losses, to receive the heat losses by gas heat conduction. The experimental results were compared with approximative theoretical models. The onset of convection is in agreement with the usual theories for parallel plates, taking the largest distance between the absorber and the glass tube as the plate distance. As a first approximation the pressure dependency of the gas heat conduction is described by the usual theory for parallel plates, taking the smallest distance between the absorber and the glass tube as the plate distance.