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Solar Thermal DHW and ASHP

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(@alex_n)
Active Member Member
Joined: 9 months ago
Posts: 7
Topic starter  

Hello,

I have been reading this thread on integrating Solar Thermal with an Air Source Heat Pump and I was wondering how feasible it would be to have Solar Thermal added to my existing ASHP installation as a boost for the DHW only. The benefits of this arrangement include the heat pump doing less DHW heating at the higher flow temps and cheaper DHW as solar thermal is four times more efficient at heating water than solar PV.

I have the Valliant UniSTOR 200l hot water cylinder installed with my heat pump and as of yet no solar panels of any kind. So I'm hoping to have a solar thermal panel installed before I use the remaining roof space for solar PV.

Would I require a special hot water cylinder with two coils (one for the ASHP and one for the solar thermal, like the one mentioned by Chris in the linked thread), or an additional cylinder/thermal battery for the solar thermal to be installed and integrated with the current cylinder? I gather this sort of installation is not common and I've yet to see it offered by installers but I don't see any major technical reasons why it shouldn't be available as an option for consumers.

Alex

 


   
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Abernyte
(@abernyte)
Honorable Member Member
Joined: 3 years ago
Posts: 234
 

I have solar thermal installed with the HP in 2019 and it works a treat. It is actually supplied via 6 hybrid panels from Solimpek. As the PV part operates it produces lots of heat as PV panels do. This heat is collected from the rear of the panels and transfers to the Mitsubishi 300ltr DHW tank via the dedicated solar coil at the bottom. The solar circuit is pressurised and is operated by a Grant solar pump station and controlled by a Resol controller. The HP works perfectly on the heating circuit and only steps in to heat the DHW as required, which for 8 months of the year is rarely. 


   
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(@alex_n)
Active Member Member
Joined: 9 months ago
Posts: 7
Topic starter  

@abernyte This is the first time I've heard of hybrid panels and they sound like a really neat idea.

So your setup uses a DHW tank that specifically has a solar coil for the solar thermal. I on the other hand, have only a standard DHW tank installed with no dedicated solar coil. My question is: Would I therefore need to replace my existing DHW tank with one that has an additional coil for solar thermal - or - install an additional dedicated DHW tank for the solar thermal alongside the existing DHW tank used by the ASHP?

I think having two DHW cylinders is cumbersome and leads to other problems to solve such as how to manage legionnaires cycles and so on with the heat pump.


   
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Abernyte
(@abernyte)
Honorable Member Member
Joined: 3 years ago
Posts: 234
 

I suspect that the cleanest solution is to use a DHW cylinder which is designed with the solar coil as it will also have the required pockets for the top and bottom sensors. I am sure it could work with a separate cylinder but that does sound a bit cumbersome unless you had a utility area with plenty of space. I use a Mitsubishi solar cylinder with an Ecodan HP and FTC5 so that it all speaks to one another.

I don't use the legionella cycle and it is switched off on my system.  The DHW is supplied via a plate heat exchanger and there are no dead legs in the domestic plumbing. The solar thermal keeps the tank sitting at 60C for much of the spring and summer so I feel that the risk which was already very low to be vanishingly so.  

If the hybrid panels have a downside it is that they do not generate as much PV as a conventional PV only panel of the same size but that was a trade off that I accepted as I use just about all of the output on running the total heating system.

This post was modified 3 weeks ago by Abernyte

   
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(@alex_n)
Active Member Member
Joined: 9 months ago
Posts: 7
Topic starter  

I'm beginning to think solar thermal is something that makes sense for those with high DHW demands and maybe not something that is necessary for a typical 3 bedroom house.

Looking at my own heat pump data (3 bedroom house), DHW only accounts for approximately 1/5 of the energy usage. Once you've made the transition from gas to renewables with a heat pump, there's really not much benefit going further with the solar thermal.

There are solar assisted heat pumps which are ingenious as they capture all the benefits of solar thermal for heating and DHW. But they are unique systems that use a large grid like collector panel which is mounted on either the roof or a wall. There's only one company that makes and installs them and if that company went bust, you'd be stuck with a white elephant if you happened to have one.

 


   
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