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Here you'll find information about the different types of water
heating systems. In the future, we will beef this page up a bit
with some more basic terminology and access to more educational
resources.
The article below was written for a Basic overview of solar
water heating systems produced by AET.
Active Systems
Active Systems require a pump to circulate the water from the solar
storage tank through the collectors. There are two general categories
of active solar water heating system - open loop and closed loop
systems.
In these types of systems the water stored in the solar storage
tank is circulated directly through the solar collectors where it
is heated and returned to the storage tank. Open loop systems are
very basic and were the first to appear on the market many years
ago.
The concept is very simple. A pump controller (called a differential
controller) will turn the pump on when the collectors are hotter
than the stored water and shut it off when they reach the same temperature.
The benefits to this system are cost and ease of installation, but
the drawbacks often outweigh these benefits.
First, there is no totally reliable form of freeze protection
other than manually draining the collectors. Therefore they should
only be considered in areas that do not freeze, ever. A second problem
is that there is no high limit protection.
By this I mean that without daily consumption of hot water, the
water in the storage tank and solar collector can boil. If this
occurs, relief valves (when operating properly) will release. This
can be messy and a waste of energy.
Finally, in open loop systems, the solar collectors
are susceptible to clogging from mineral deposits in areas of problem
water.
Figure 1 below depicts a typical open loop system.

Figure 1. The open loop system.
Unlike open loop systems, closed loop systems do not directly heat
the water in the storage tank. By this I mean the water in the tank
does not circulate directly through the solar collectors. There
are two types of closed loop systems - the glycol indirect system
and the drainback system.
In this type of system a separate fluid is circulated through
the collectors and a heat exchanger is used to transfer this heat
to the water in the storage tank. This heat exchanger can either
be built into the storage tank, or separate from it. If separate
an additional pump is required to circulate water from the storage
tank through the exchanger. The heat exchanger fluid is typically
propylene glycol. Additional items such as an expansion tank, pressure
gages, and fill valves are also required.
Glycol Indirect System
Like the open loop system, the glycol closed loop system has been
around a very long time. It also alleviates two of the three problems
encountered in an open loop system. By using glycol as the heat
transfer fluid the chance of freeze damage is eliminated. Additionally
it eliminates the problem of fouling the collectors in areas that
encounter hard water.
There still remains the problem of high limit protection and the
potential of failure of the additional components added (expansion
tank, pressure gages, etc). Figure 2 depicts a typical indirect
glycol closed loop system.

Figure 2. Indirect Glycol Closed Loop System.
The drainback system was first introduced in a large
scale back in the 1980's. They have been proven very reliable and
are more efficient than the indirect glycol system. This is a non-pressurized
closed loop system using water as the heat transfer fluid.
A small drainback reservoir is installed in the collector
loop. When this system is filled with water it is only filled to
the top of reservoir. Since it is located below the collectors,
they remain dry when the pump is not circulating. When the collectors
are hotter than the water in storage, the pump circulates the water
in the reservoir through the collectors where it is heated. The
heat from this water is then transferred to the solar storage tank
through a heat exchanger located either in the storage tank or drainback
reservoir. When the collectors approach the same temperature as
the water in the storage tank or this water has reached a preset
temperature, the pump shuts off and all the water drains back the
reservoir.
The drainback system eliminates all the problems inherent
in the other types of systems. First, freeze protection is based
on gravity. Second, the pump is shut off when the storage tank reaches
its high limit setting and all water is drained from the collectors.
And finally, the problems encountered in the collectors in hard
water areas are eliminated. The drainback system also uses fewer
components than any of the other types of active system, thus the
potential of component failure is drastically reduced. Figure 3
depicts a typical drainback system.

Figure 3. Drainback Closed
Loop System.
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