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Types of Solar Cooker 220715 Solar cookers have two jobs to do: – a) they must concentrate solar energy onto a food container to heat up the food, and b) then they must prevent that heat from escaping. There are several ways of achieving these two goals. Each has advantages and disadvantages. Four types of solar cooker have evolved over the years, and some hybrids. The four main types are described below: 1) The simplest and cheapest solar cooker is the Panel Cooker (right). The shiny panels reflect sunlight onto a black food container that sits inside a transparent ‘greenhouse’. In this case, a large glass container is being used. Its job is to prevent heat from the cooking pot escaping too easily to the air. Heat resistant plastic bags – like microwave bags, can be used instead of a glass container. This design – the CooKit - is widely used in refugee camps, and you can download a template from the internet. Its reflective panels can be made from nothing more expensive than the inside surface of old crisp packets and some discarded cardboard. Even a commercially produced version will cost less than £10 delivered. They are effective enough to boil water and to cook a couple of litres of food if they receive bright sunlight for 4 to 6 hours. Once pointed towards the sun, they need only be moved every two hours or so, and this means the cook can leave them unattended and do other tasks. These could be regarded as the ‘slow cookers’ of the solar cooking world. 2) Solar Box Cookers are a little more complicated, but still relatively cheap to build for yourself. Here (above left) is a picture of a version produced commercially in Portugal. Internal temperatures can exceed 180 o C, so you can cook (and brown) bread inside these. Sunlight is reflected from mirrors through the glass lid of the box. The inside of the box and the cooking pot are black, and so they heat up. This heat is retained because the box itself is well insulated. Like panel cookers, these can be left unattended for hours at a time. 3) Parabolic Cookers, like the one pictured on the right, are particularly good at focusing all of the available energy onto the cooking container, and this means they can be used to cook (or burn!) food quite quickly. They certainly cannot be left unattended, and must be refocused on the sun every twenty minutes or so as it moves across the sky. Their power output is only constrained by their diameter. A parabolic cooker with a diameter of 2 metres would produce over 2 kW but it would be unwieldy, especially in a strong wind. So much power is produced that little attempt is usually made to insulate the cooking vessels used with parabolic cookers. 4) Evacuated tube cookers (left) rely on a technology first developed for solar water heating. The tube is double walled and made of borosilicate glass. A vacuum between the two tubes prevents heat escaping, and the black coating on the inner tube is ‘selective’ so it absorbs the maximum amount of light energy while re-emitting very little. The food is placed inside the inner tube, usually in a tray. The parabolic reflectors focus almost all of the sunlight that strikes them onto the cooking tube and they are by far the most efficient solar cookers developed to date. They are less robust than simpler cookers, but allow food to be cooked even under bright but overcast skies. CooKit Panel Cooker Evacuated tube solar cooker with compound parabolic reflectors Box Oven Parabolic Cooker

150827 - Types of Solar Cooker - SLiCK Solar Stove

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Page 1: 150827 - Types of Solar Cooker - SLiCK Solar Stove

Types of Solar Cooker 220715

Solar cookers have two jobs to do: –

a) they must concentrate solar energy onto a food container to heat up the food, and

b) then they must prevent that heat from escaping.

There are several ways of achieving these two goals. Each hasadvantages and disadvantages. Four types of solar cooker haveevolved over the years, and some hybrids. The four main types aredescribed below:

1) The simplest and cheapest solar cooker is the Panel Cooker(right). The shiny panels reflect sunlight onto a black food containerthat sits inside a transparent ‘greenhouse’. In this case, a largeglass container is being used. Its job is to prevent heat from thecooking pot escaping too easily to the air. Heat resistant plastic

bags – like microwave bags,can be used instead of aglass container. This design – the CooKit - is widely used in refugeecamps, and you can download a template from the internet. Itsreflective panels can be made from nothing more expensive than theinside surface of old crisp packets and some discarded cardboard.Even a commercially produced version will cost less than £10delivered. They are effective enough to boil water and to cook acouple of litres of food if they receive bright sunlight for 4 to 6 hours.Once pointed towards the sun, they need only be moved every twohours or so, and this means thecook can leave them unattendedand do other tasks. These couldbe regarded as the ‘slow cookers’of the solar cooking world.

2) Solar Box Cookers are a little more complicated, but still relativelycheap to build for yourself. Here (above left) is a picture of a versionproduced commercially in Portugal. Internal temperatures can exceed180oC, so you can cook (and brown) bread inside these. Sunlight isreflected from mirrors through the glass lid of the box. The inside of thebox and the cooking pot are black, and so they heat up. This heat isretained because the box itself is well insulated. Like panel cookers,these can be left unattended for hours at a time.

3) Parabolic Cookers, like the one pictured on the right, are particularlygood at focusing all of the available energy onto the cooking container,and this means they can be used to cook (or burn!) food quite quickly.They certainly cannot be left unattended, and must be refocused on thesun every twenty minutes or so as it moves across the sky. Their poweroutput is only constrained by their diameter. A parabolic cooker with adiameter of 2 metres would produce over 2 kW but it would be unwieldy,

especially in a strong wind. Somuch power is produced that little attempt is usually made to insulatethe cooking vessels used with parabolic cookers.

4) Evacuated tube cookers (left) rely on a technology first developedfor solar water heating. The tube is double walled and made ofborosilicate glass. A vacuum between the two tubes prevents heatescaping, and the black coating on the inner tube is ‘selective’ so itabsorbs the maximum amount of light energy while re-emitting verylittle. The food is placed inside the inner tube, usually in a tray. Theparabolic reflectors focus almost all of the sunlight that strikes themonto the cooking tube and they are by far the most efficient solarcookers developed to date. They are less robust than simpler cookers,but allow food to be cooked even under bright but overcast skies.

CooKitPanelCooker

Evacuated tube solarcooker with compoundparabolic reflectors

BoxOven

ParabolicCooker