REUK.CO.UK This is the printer friendly version of the Solar Greenhouse Heat Sink article from the Renewable Energy Website REUK.co.uk. Click here to print this article. Printed at 01:24pm 18th December 2024 Solar Greenhouse Heat SinkFind out how to make a solar powered heatsink for your greenhouseThe Greenhouse (1) provides gardeners in a cool climate such as that in the UK the opportunity to grow a wider range of fruits and vegetables and also to extend the growing season. To maximise the benefits of a greenhouse some form of heating is required to guarantee a frost-free winter, and warm nighttime temperatures. In this article we will look at how solar power (2) can be used to keep a greenhouse warm in an environmentally friendly manner as an alternative to the expensive to run paraffin, oil, and electric heaters designed for greenhouse heating. Greenhouse HeatsinkDuring the first series of BBC2's It's Not Easy Being Green, Dick Strawbridge put together an elegant greenhouse heating system using a 10 Watt PV Solar Panel (3), a 12V battery (4), a small fan, some PVC waste pipe, and 1 cubic metre of crushed glass.The aim of the greenhouse heatsink is to keep the greenhouse warm at night, and also to keep the greenhouse from getting too hot in the day. Making a Greenhouse Heatsink SystemA hole - the bigger the better, but ideally 1 metre wide and deep - is well insulated (using polystyrene and foil) and filled with anything through which air can pass which stores heat. Dick Strawbridge used crushed glass, however pea gravel (available from builders' merchants and pictured above) can be used instead as can small pieces of metal, small recycled filled bottles of water, fire bricks, etc. Note that any material which feels cold to the touch will work well as a heatsink/heat store. The solar panel (5) charges the battery which in turn drives a small recycled PC cooling fan (shown above) 24 hours per day. The fan sucks air in from the top (apex) of the greenhouse where the air is hottest and pumps it through the 38mm standard PVC waste pipe into the base of the heatsink hole. The hot air then rises through the heatsink warming the heatsink material and cooling the air which emerges through a vent (e.g. an old chimney pot or waste pipe) and into the greenhouse. At nighttime the now cool air at the top of the greenhouse is pushed through the now warm heatsink heating up the air and cooling down the heatsink material. This warm air then passes through the vent into the greenhouse where it helps to keep up the temperature. More InformationNEW for more information about putting together a solar powered greenhouse heatsink system, take a look at our new article Greenhouse Heatsink Connection Diagram (6). There we look at how you go about choosing the solar panel, battery, and fan, and how to connect everything together for a safe, efficient, and reliable system.Web Link References(1) http://www.self-sufficient.co.uk/The-Greenhouse.htm(2) http://www.reuk.co.uk/solar.htm (3) http://www.reuk.co.uk/How-Do-PV-Solar-Panels-Work.htm (4) http://www.reuk.co.uk/storage.htm (5) http://www.reuk.co.uk/shop-SOLAR-POWER.htm (6) http://www.reuk.co.uk/Greenhouse-Heatsink-Connection-Diagram.htm Article from REUK.co.uk: http://www.reuk.co.uk/Solar-Greenhouse-Heat-Sink.htm Published: 24th September 2014 © REUK 2024 |