Re: Trying to keep up w/ Chem Geek
Ok, I'll toss something in here to go more esoteric. While your discussion on heat transfer and flowrates is in the right direction, its for some of the wrong reasons (or reasoning). Time in the box has a lot less to do with it than turbulent flow.
Water (or any fluid) flowing through tubes very slowly will have a laminar flow pattern, which is to say that the water along the walls stays along the walls and the water in the center stays in the center of the tube. There is no cross mixing. This is a very in-efficient way to transfer heat since only the water near the wall heats up much in the tube...the heat doesn't have time to get to the center.
At very high flow rates the flow is fully turbulent, meaning that the is nearly full mixing within the tube and water near the wall at one point gets moved to the center and vice versa. This allows more heat transfer since more water contacts the tube wall and can get to near wall-temperature.
There is a middle zone between laminar and turbulent called the transition zone where there is partial mixing.
We calculate the amount of turbulence with a dimensionless number called the Reynolds number (I won't include the formula, you can google it). Reynolds numbers below about 2000 are laminar, over about 4000 are fully turbulent.
When we design industrial heat exchangers (one of the things I do) we are carefully to match tube size and flow rate to get Reynolds numbers in the turbulent range to be sure of good mixing within the tubes and good heat transfer coefficient. This is likely the most important factor in determining the overall efficiency in your solar panel, and why published efficiency numbers increase with flowrate. Since pressure drop also increases with flowrate, I would guess that the panel builders design them for only as much pressure as is needed to get to a flowrate that is just above optimum Reynolds numbers for heat transfer.
Oh, BTW, wind chill isn't a very good comparison to what's going on in the solar panel. Wind chill is evaporative cooling determined mostly by the difference between wet-bulb and dry-bulb air temperatures on your damp skin, and not simply the air flow removing heat from you body. The phase change from liquid water to vapor takes roughly 1000 Btu per pound of water, which is a lot of cooling energy.
22,000 gal IG, Tagelus 60 Sand filter, 1.5 HP Pentair Challenger and a very dead heater.
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