Solar thermal system beats stagnation problems

AO Smith, solar thermal, renewable energy, DHW, domestic hot water

A.O. Smith solar thermal systems for producing domestic hot water have a patented system to overcome the problem of stagnation in the panels. Mounted directly below the solar collector, the drain-back system avoids stagnation, when the heat-transfer fluid can overheat and start to break down. There is also no need to start the pump to get rid of excess heat when the demand for hot water is low, and no need to build in an oversized storage system to cope with excess heat.

The heat-transfer fluid in the panels is not pressurised. When there is no demand for heat, the pump is switched off and all the heat-transfer fluid drains back into the reservoir beneath the panels.

A complete system comprises solar panels with an SGE or SGS condensing gas-fired water heater and an intelligent control system. All the system elements communicate directly, resulting in up to 40% solar contribution. If the solar input is low, the pump speed can be modulated down to 15% of nominal speed, maximising the solar energy available.

The panels and water heater are supplied as an integrated system, with commissioning carried out by fully trained technical staff.

For more information on this story, click here:  Dec 2010, 108
Related links:
Related articles:



modbs tv logo

Fujitsu General Air Conditioning becomes GENERAL HVAC Solutions UK

Fujitsu General Air Conditioning (UK) has become GENERAL HVAC Solutions UK from 1st January 2026, strengthening its long-term position within the global Paloma Rheem Holdings (PRH) group.

Market performance indicates encouraging signs for future of BEMS sector

Highlighting an increased desire from property developers, architects and designers to decarbonise the UK’s building stock through the specification and implementation of building controls and automation, the building energy management systems (BEMS) market showed steady progress in Q3 – rising 2.6% compared to the previous quarter.