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https://scidar.kg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/22653| Title: | STEPWISE SINGLE-AXIS TRACKING OF FLAT-PLATE SOLAR COLLECTORS: OPTIMAL ROTATION STEP SIZE IN A CONTINENTAL CLIMATE |
| Authors: | Kowalik, Robert Nešović, Aleksandar |
| Journal: | Energies |
| Issue Date: | 2025 |
| Abstract: | This study investigates the effect of rotation step size on the performance of flat-plate solar collectors (FPSC) equipped with single-axis tracking. Numerical simulations were carried out in EnergyPlus, coupled with a custom Python interface enabling dynamic control of collector orientation. The analysis was carried out for the city of Kragujevac in Serbia, located in a temperate continental climate zone, based on five representative summer days (3 July–29 September) to account for seasonal variability. Three collector types with different efficiency parameters were considered, and inlet water temperatures of 20 °C, 30 °C, and 40 °C were applied to represent typical operating conditions. The results show that single-axis tracking increased the incident irradiance by up to 28% and the useful seasonal heat gain by up to 25% compared to the fixed configuration. Continuous tracking (ψ = 1°) achieved the highest energy yield but required 181 daily movements, which makes it mechanically demanding. Stepwise tracking with ψ = 10–15° retained more than 90–95% of the energy benefit of continuous tracking while reducing the number of daily movements to 13–19. For larger steps (ψ = 45–90°), the advantage of tracking decreased sharply, with thermal output only 5–10% higher than the fixed case. Increasing the inlet temperature from 20 °C to 40 °C reduced seasonal heat gain by approximately 30% across all scenarios. Overall, the findings indicate that relative single-axis tracking with ψ between 10° and 15° provides the most practical balance between energy efficiency, reliability, and economic viability, making it well-suited for residential-scale solar thermal systems. This is the first study to quantify how discrete rotation steps in single-axis tracking affect both thermal and economic performance of flat-plate collectors. The proposed EnergyPlus–Python model demonstrates that a 10–15° step offers 90–95% of the continuous-tracking energy gain while reducing actuator motion by ~85%. The results provide practical guidance for optimizing low-cost solar-thermal tracking in continental climates. |
| URI: | https://scidar.kg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/22653 |
| Type: | article |
| DOI: | 10.3390/en18215776 |
| ISSN: | 1996-1073 |
| Appears in Collections: | Institute for Information Technologies, Kragujevac |
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