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| United States Patent | 3986491 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/3986491.html |
| Inventor(s) | O'Hanlon; Edward J. (Assembly Point, Warren County, Lake George, NY 12845) |
| Abstract | A reduction of first cost and an increase in solar heat collection
efficiency are primary considerations. Heat absorbing liquid is confined
to a narrow unobstructed path, with wide flairing wings exposed directly
to the sun. The need for painted heat absorbing surfaces is largely
eliminated. Transparent or translucent cover is easily removable and
replaceable. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 3986491 |
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Summer and winter solar heat collector |
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| Publication Date |
October 19, 1976 |
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| Filing Date |
January 15, 1975 |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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| Market Size |
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Estimate the gross annual revenues of the relevant market
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| Market Share |
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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What percentage of gross sales should the inventor or assignee be paid?
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Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
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| Market Size | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Market Share | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Reasonable Royalty | N/A | [No votes] |
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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I claim:
1. A solar heat collecting panel, comprising a tray, a metallic darkened
surface within said tray, plastic foam heat insulation between said tray
and said darkened solar heat collecting sheet metallic surface, said
surface having alternate ridges and valleys running lengthwise said sheet
metallic surface, a solar light and heat penetrating fibrous reinforced
heat hardened corrugated plastic surface, spaced apart from said hill and
valley darkened sheet metal surface, and fastened firmly to the sides and
the ends of said tray, resilient means sealing the space between said tray
and said solar light and heat penetrating corrugated plastic surface,
screws positioned in and penetrating said resilient means and the concave
portions of said corrugated sheet plastic surface, and also penetrating
and being fastened into said tray across one end of said corrugated
plastic surface, a liquid admitting manifold near one end of said metallic
surface with holes positioned within said manifold to direct streams of
solar heat collecting liquid from said manifold into the valley portions
of said solar heat collecting darkened sheet metallic surface, and means
for removing solar heated liquid from the end of the heat gathering
darkened sheet metallic surface opposite to the end of the sheet metallic
surface where said solar heat gathering liquid was first admitted in order
to flow down through said darkened sheet metallic valleys. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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My present invention clearly distinguishes from the standard sheet of
corrigated metal or the serpantine tube arrange as is customary in the
design of solar heat collectors. It is also quite different from the pairs
of thin metal plates, usually placed surface to surface with suitable pipe
lines embossed to resemble a serpantine tubular path for the heat
absorbing liquid to follow while collecting solar heat.
In my improved device there is no metal between the solar heat collecting
liquid and the solar rays themselves. My transparent or translucent cover
over the solar heat collecting surface is easily removable and replaceable
for summer and winter use. Preferably it is a sheet of fibrous
(fibreglass) reinforced transparent or translucent heat hardened plastic,
in this case, polyester resin modified with clear acrylic, assuring the
maximum transmission of the sun's rays, through a removable cover
substantially unbreakable.
Since my heat collecting surface is composed of valleys and hills which
guide the heat absorbing liquid downward, and due to its narrow path
through the valleys, prevent it from spreading itself broadly across the
solar heat collecting surface, the wide flairing wing like hills of this
same surface assure the maximum solar heat pick-up and its rapid transfer
to the liquid in its unobstructed downward path.
Rather than paint the solar heat collecting sheet metallic surface, I
prefer to either oxidize or anodize this surface to a dark heat absorbing
color (preferably black). Paint too often interferes with the swift and
positive heat reception by the solar heat collecting plate. My purpose is
to forgo this same obstacle to rapid solar heat collection. Solar heat
must travel as rapidly as posible from the sun into the heat collecting
plate and then from the hills of the plate to the water running down its
valleys. In this way a small proportion of the heat collector plate is wet
by the liquid taking away the solar heat collected.
When my solar heat collector faces the south, as the solar rays across its
surface move from the east to the west during the morning and afternoon,
the wide flairing hills in my metallic solar heat collecting plate,
receive the maximum solar heat during the hours the sun is up and the
solar heat collector is functioning. As a transparent or translucent
surface above and across the metallic heat collecting surface, with a
proper space prevailing between these two surfaces, I prefer to use for
the purpose of strength and non-bendability a sheet of corrigated plastic,
whose corrigations as far as possible focus the rays of the sun on one
side of the flairing hills in the morning, and focus the solar rays on the
opposite side of the hills during the afternoon when the sun is out and
shining on my collector. Nothing like this has ever been approached in
previous solar heat collectors to my personal knowledge.
As a result, my metallic solar heat absorbing plate with its hill and
valley indentation cam can better absorbe the early morning solar heat,
and the late afternoon's rays of the declining solar heat source. This is
an improvement largely previously either ignored or neglected in former
solar heat collectors.
Painted surfaces not only interfere with maximum solar heat transfer but
represent a maintainence problem because they do not always stay painted.
This particular improvement in my solar heat collecting equipment amounts
to a reduction in to cost of operating my solar heat collecting facility.
Another feature is the narrowness of my heat collecting path, diminishing
the amount of liquid surface that can reflect the sun's rays outward
again, after these same rays have impinged upon the travelling liquid's
surface. By keeping the heat absorbing liquid's path as narrow as
possible, this return outward reflection of solar rays is kept at a
minimum, a solar heat collection phenomena probably not completely
previously well understood.
While the corrugated transparent or translucent fibrous reinforced plastic
surface needs to be sufficiently tight to prevent the escape of valuable
solar heat once it has been absorbed in the collector, I have accomplished
this needed tightness by strips of sponge rubber under the edges of the
corrigated sheet, plane strips running lengthwise the collector and strips
with a corrugated upper surface to conform with the corrigations in the
plastic sheet, permitting the corrugated sheet to be fastened down with
screws inserted in the heat collector at the low places in the
corrigations of the corrugated sheet, across the collector ends. This
arrangement permits the easy removal of the corrugated sheet in the summer
time if this is found to be desirable.
In the drawings,
FIG. 1 is a plan view of my solar heat collector.
FIG. 2 is a sectional view taken along the lines 2--2 in FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a sectional view taken along the lines 3--3 in FIG. 1.
FIG. 4 is a section taken along 4--4 in FIG. 1.
My improved solar heat collector is here indicated by the numeral 1. Its
exterior corrugated plastic surface numeral 2 covers solar heat collecting
plate 3 resting on plastic foam 4 in heat collector tray 5.
As will be noted the heat collector plate 3 is provided with wide flairing
hill portions 6 at an angle upward from each side of valley portion 7,
these hill and valley indentations running lengthwise the heat collecting
and transmitting plate from its upper portion 9 to its lower portion 10.
At 10 this heat collector plate is turned upward to comprise a reservoir
for solar heated liquid which has run down the valleys 7 and is to exit
through pipe 11 as shown in FIG. 1. Numeral 12 in all figures of the
drawing represent the liquid distributing manifold through which the solar
heat pick-up liquid enters my solar heat collector. The numeral 13 are the
holes in this upper most positioned liquid entering manifold (or tube) by
which each valley 7 in the heat collecting metal sheet or plate 3 receive
the liquid needed to acquire the incomming solar heat.
It will be noted that the corrugations in the transparent or translucent
corrugated sheet 2 are so arranged to focus the rays of the sun in the
morning on one side of the hill indentations 6, and on the other side of
the hill indentations 6 in the afternoon. Since the corrugated sheet has
circular cross sectioned surfaces, these same surfaces tend to act
somewhat as a magnifying glass in assembling the solar rays and causing
them to impact the valleys 7 and the flaired hill portions 6 of of the
sheet metal heat collecting plate 3 below. These upward surfaces in the
corrugated sheet are here designated by the numeral 14 in the drawings. My
heat absorbing liquid can contain black powder.
At numerals 16 and 16 I show longitudinal strips of sponge rubber
positioned to make fairly heat leak tight the space between the corrugated
sheet 2 and the metallic solar heat collector plate 3. These are glued in
place by a suitable adhesive material and the corrugated sheet is held
down in position by a holding angle metal strip 17 along each of the two
sides of the solar heat collector. My liquid can be dyed black.
Across the two ends of the corrugated sheet, that is, at each end of solar
heat collector 1, numeral 18 in FIG. 3 shows the upper strip of sponge
rubber glued along its uncorrugated bottom surface to a flat strip of
elongated sheet metal 19 welded to metallic solar heat collector plate 3.
In similar manner along the width of solar heat collector sheet 3 is
welded a similar strip of sheet metal 20 to which the non-corrugated
bottom of sponge rubber strip 21 is suitably glued.
The upper surfaces of sponge rubber cross strips 18 and 21 are properly
corrugated to conform with the corrugations in the corrugated plastic
plate into which they fit. At the low points in the corrugated plastic
sheet, holding screws 22 are inserted to hold the corrugated plastic sheet
firmly to each end of the solar heat collector 1.
Previous solar heat collectors work but not efficiently as is required. It
is believed that my apparatus as herein disclosed represents over all a
distinct advance in the solar heat collector art at this particular time.
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Description  |
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