Best Solar Panels – Global Ranking Of Manufacturers

Posted by admin on Aug 16, 2009

In 2007  ENF Ltd., a reputable China and UK based photovoltaic information company, took a brand survey of photovoltaic installation companies in 45 different countries.

ENF is a photovoltaic information company located in China and in the U.K. .  Those were the results:

 

Best Solar Panels

Global No.1 Brand: SunPower
Global No.2 Brand: Schott Solar
Global No.3 Brand: Solar World
No.1 Product Quality: Sanyo
No.1 Value for Money: Suntech Power

 

Best Solar Panels Inverters

Global No.1 Brand: Kaco Solar
Global No.2 Brand: OutBack
Global No.3 Brand: Mastervolt
No.1 Product Quality: OutBack
No.1 Value for Money: Kaco Solar

 

 

Best Solar Panels Mounting Systems

Global No.1 Brand: Direct Power & Water
Global No.2 Brand: UniRac
Global No.3 Brand: Schüco

 

 

Best Solar Trackers

Global No.1 Brand: Zomeworks

 

Best Solar Systems

Global No.1 Brand: Sharp

 

ENF is a photovoltaic information company located in China and in the U.K.. Their 3 core activities are:

1. Photovoltaic Company Directory
2. Photovoltaic Market Research
3. Trade Services

CEO: Kit Temple Website: http://www.enf.cn

 

How can you find the “best solar panels” for your purpose?

A good way to start finding out is to ask yourself: Do I want to produce electrical power to run electrical devices in the house, in the garden or on the way, e.g. Lights, Stereos, Computers etc.? Or do I want to produce heat / hot water for house and pool? In this article you will learn how to choose the best solar panels and do both.

Electrical Power with Photovoltaic Panels

  Strictly speaking “Solar Panels” are Photovoltaic Panels or Photovoltaic Modules. Solar Panels in this respect convert shortwave radiation, mostly sunlight, into  electrical power. They consist of Photovoltaic Cells made of Silicium or other semiconducting materials. (Silicium is worldwide most frequently used). These Solar Panels are available in different sizes, (falling) prices and, depending on size and material, different degrees of efficiency and amounts of wattage they can produce.

Now how to choose the best solar panels out of this wide range of electricity producing modules? Please consider two more things:

  • The bigger the solar panel, the more electricity it will relatively produce
  • The higher the degree of efficiency, the more electricity it will realtively produce

So, if you have a small rooftop and a lot of money, you may get Gallium-Arsenik-Solar Panels installed. They have the biggest commercial available degree of efficiency (30%) and produce 50 Watt / Kilogram. They are perhaps the best solar panels and very, very expensive.  

If you have an average roof and average money, you may consider multicristalline Silicium Panels. Their degree of efficiency is circa 16% and are the best solar panels in cost/performance ratio at the time. Further alternatives are:

  • Monocristalline Silicium Panels (degree of efficiency is over 20% at 20 – 50 Watt per Kilogram
  • Amorphous Silicium Thin-Film-Panels (degree of efficiency at 5 – 7 %, best solar panels in sales at the time)

Hot Water with Solar Collectors

  Solar Thermal Collectors or Solar Collectors, on the other hand, are devices that also utilize the sunlight. They generate heat / hot water and use a technology that is very different to Photovoltaic Modules. Nevertheless are they commonly named “Solar Panels”, too. That especially when they are non parabolic flat and installed on rooftops. Solar Collectors can produce heat / hot water with a high degree of efficiency. Residential installations provide hot water for heating and shower. Industrial Solar Collectors can use the produced hot water even to run electrical generators and produce electrical power. Depending on the different ways of damping the Solar Absorber there are 4 major kinds of Solar Thermal Collectors:

  1. Flat Plate – Uses common insulating material
  2. Evacuated Tube – Uses vacuum for damping, is more expensive
  3. Vacuum Flat Plate – Is flat, has a good gross/net ratio and is vacuum damped. The best Solar Panels for hot water.
  4. Low Temperatur Absorber – Is a simple absorber, mostly used to heat swimming pools, mostly consists of plastic material and is in the majority of cases undamped. But belongs to the best solar panels for pool heating.

There are some other kinds of Solar Collectors such as Air, Asphalt and Volumetric Thermal Collectors. The latter may be the earliest Solar Collector in human history but in real life you may use one of the 4 common Collector-Types mentioned above to produce heat / hot water.

Summary:

If you want to produce electricity, the best solar panels are photovoltaic panels. If you want to produce heat / hot water, the best solar panels for you are Solar Thermal Collectors. There are a lot of differences in price and performance in both categories, depending on several factors mentioned above. Consider consulting one or several local Solar-Specialists to get advice on location. Consider as well building your own solar panels, save a lot of money and get a lot of fun.

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Brief History of Water Solar Panels

Posted by admin on Aug 23, 2009

Sun and sunlight have been utilized by mankind for ages. It served to spark a fire, boil water or measure time with sundials. It was a long way from then to the modern water solar panels of these days. This article gives a brief outline of water solar panel’s history

One of the most ancient energetic use of the sunlight supposedly goes back to old Babylon of 2000 B.C.. Dark water containers were exposed to the sun to heat up the water. Later on there, sun heated pigmented water was used as a transfer fluid in one of the world’s oldest “water solar panels”.

In China, small concave mirrors were used to spark a fire around 700 B.C..
Furthermore it is said that the Grecian mathematician and inventor Archimedes of Syracus, who lived more than 2200 years ago between 285 and 212 B.C.set light to the Roman fleet with the aid of concave mirrors (see picture).

Picture: Copperplate engraving on the title page of the Latin edition of “Thesaurus Opticus”, which was written by Arabic academic Alhazen. The picture shows Archimedes of Syracus setting light to the Roman Fleet with the aid of concave mirrors. Source: Bavarian National Library

 
In 1767, Swiss natural scientist and physicist Horace-Bénedict de Saussure constructed his “capteur solaire” (sun catcher). This early form of water solar panels consisted of 5 stacked glass cases on a black base and reached temperatures up to 88°C / 190°F and, as rumor has it, even up to 110°C / 230°F.

 

Flat Plate Solar Collector (Flat Water Solar Panel)

De Saussure’s sun catcher is deemed to be the forerunner for today’s Flat Plate Water Solar Panels, aptly named “Thermal Solar Collectors” or in short “Solar Collectors”.

In the 1870’s, French engineers Augustin B. Mouchot and Abel J. Pifre combined concave mirrors with a thermal solar collector and built the first solar powered steam engine. They aimed the focus of a parabolic reflector at a black painted steam boiler and thus managed to drive a water pump.


Evacuated Tube Solar Collector (Vacuum Water Solar Panel)

The precursor for today’s evacuated tube water solar panels has been the thermos flask, invented by the Scotch physicist James Dewar in 1893. (So-called Dewar tubes, using Dewar’s insulation technology, are core elements in parabolic trough collectors today.) Adapted from the Dewar flask, US American electrical engineer William Le Roy Emmet developed vacuum tubes to utilize solar power. His work is the basis of today’s evacuated tube water solar panels.


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Water Solar Panels – the main different types

Posted by admin on Aug 22, 2009

The core of all heat and electricity producing water solar panels is a collector. For this reason water solar panels are correctly named “Thermal Solar Collectors” or “Solar Collectors”.

Heat producing water solar panels

A distinction is drawn here between 2 types of collectors: Flat Plate Collectors and Evacuated Tube Collectors.

Flat plate collectors in water solar panels

The flat plate consists of an coated absorber to absorb solar radiation and convert them into heat. The absorber is installed in a damped case to reduce heat loss. Its faceplate, mostly glass, is transparent to let pass the solar radiation. Inside the water solar panel absorber
are tubes that are filled with transfer liquid. This liquid passes a heat exchanger to heat up water for domestic use such as heating, shower and pool heating.

Advantages of flat plate water solar panels:
- many different options of mounting
- complaisant integration into rooftops
- reasonably priced

Evacuated tubes in water solar panels

Those types are also known as vacuum tube collectors. They consist of glass tubes which are strung together. These tubes are vacuum insulated, highly reflective and weather proof metalized. Inside the evacuated tubes run tube loops, again filled with transfer liquid to pass a heat exchanger and boil domestic water for pool heating, house heating and shower.

Advantages of evacuated tube water solar panels
- higher degree of efficiency, especially at times of lower insolation
- some makings allow the replacement of single modules
- visually interesting

Electricity producing water solar panels

Electricity generating “water solar panels” are not (yet) used in private households. They are used almost exclusively in solar power generating plants. These solar collectors produce hot steam to drive electric generators. Three major types of collectors are used:

1. Parabolic dishes. They concentrate the sunlight at a narrow focus and reach the highest temperatures.
2. Parabolic troughs. These are trough shaped parabolic mirrors. They focus on an air insulated Dewar tube, filled with transfer liquid.
3. Power tower. A power tower consists of self aligning mirrors. The concentrate insolation on a receiver at the top of the tower. Power towers can be considered as a colossal parabolic dish.


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