PASSIVE SOLAR DESIGN USING COMPUTER GENERATED SUNCHARTS

Copyright © 1995 & 2006 by Thomas M. Crawford
All Rights Reserved

INTRODUCTION

The sunchart is one of the basic solar energy design tools. With proper knowledge, both professional and amateur solar designers can use the sunchart to efficiently and easily design and positionally optimize solar collectors, solar electrical panels, passive solar homes, greenhouses, and other solar devices. SolarPhotons provides this homepage to disseminate basic information on using suncharts as tools for designing and optimizing your solar energy projects.


TABLE OF CONTENTS


WHAT IS A SUNCHART?

The sunchart is a map of the sun's path across the sky during the year. Even though its path changes from day to day and from latitude to latitude, the position of the sun at any time on any day of the year is entirely predictable. A sunchart maps out the sun's position as a function of day and time, thus allowing the solar designer to engineer optimum solar collector designs.

Figure 1 shows a typical cylindrical sunchart for 50 degrees north latitude.
Figure 2 shows a typical polar sunchart for 50 degrees north latitude.

Figures 1 and 2 show two typical suncharts for 50 degrees north latitude. These suncharts map out the path that the sun takes on approximately the 21st day of each month. The lowest or shortest path represents the first day of winter (approximately December 21), while the highest or longest path represents the first day of summer, (approximately June 21). The other paths each represent two months during the year, and are drawn at monthly (30 to 31 day) intervals. This is explained more in a following section of this paper.

Also on these suncharts, iso-time curves connect the solar path curves to provide time-of-day information. These curves are drawn an hour apart, with solar noon being along the y-axis of the sunchart. Using this information, it is easy to determine where the sun is at any time of the day. Note that this information is in sun time instead of real time. Solar noon is defined as the time when the sun reaches its highest point in the sky. Conversions between sun time and real time can be done using mathematical functions of latitude, longitude, and time of year. This will again be discussed in a following section of this paper.

Several simple but important observations can be made directly from these two suncharts:

Two types of suncharts, shown above, are useful for performing solar energy calculations. Though not true physically, we can envision the sky to be the inside surface of a hemisphere or dome on which the sun, moon, stars, and planets are constrained to move. This hemisphere or dome is called the skydome. In order to locate the sun's position on the surface of the skydome at any time, we need two coordinates, the altitude angle and the azimuth angle. The altitude angle measures the sun's location above the horizon, with 0 degrees being on the horizon and 90 degrees being straight overhead. The azimuth angle measures the sun's location in degrees east or west of due south (northern hemisphere assumed). Eastern angles are defined as negative with due east located at -90 degrees; western angles are defined positive with due west located at +90 degrees.

We can map the altitude and azimuth solar coordinates in several different ways. Two of the most useful solar maps or suncharts are the cylindrical sunchart and the polar sunchart. Both types of suncharts provide exactly the same information, but they each provide a different way to visualize the data. Your preference will depend on your application.

A cylindrical sunchart is a cylindrical projection of the skydome. This is the type of sunchart shown in figure 1. It is plotted in Cartesian coordinates. The cylindrical sunchart shows the path which the sun will appear to take to an observer looking due south (in northern latitudes). This appears to be the preferred form of sunchart, and various interpretive tools have been developed for use with this type of sunchart. The cylindrical sunchart is useful for conducting shading calculations. It is also useful for visualizing the sun's path at high latitudes, especially for the winter months when solar energy is more important. Its major disadvantages occur when the sun is high in the sky (summer months & lower latitudes). This type of sunchart is very confusing in tropical situations.

The polar sunchart on the other hand uses polar coordinates to map out the sun's path. It projects the sun's path looking down onto a flat plane, with the observer being directly in the center of the plane. This is the type of sunchart shown in figure 2. It provides exactly the same information as the cylindrical sunchart, but in a different format for visualization purposes. The polar sunchart makes it much easier to visualize the compass direction of the sun at any point in time. It is easier to use at tropical latitudes and during the summer months. For some reason, this type of sunchart does not seem as popular as the cylindrical version, but it should be just as useful, especially in certain applications. Since both types of suncharts provide the same information in different formats, personal preference and the visualization effects you want to achieve should govern your choice of sunchart.


HOW IS A SUNCHART MADE?

Both the cylindrical and polar versions of the sunchart are produced by plotting the position of the sun at various times of the day and on various days of the year. Basically, the position of the sun is measured or calculated at various times of the day by measuring both its altitude and azimuth angles and mapping these into the coordinate system of preference. The curve that is plotted will be different on each day of the year, and it will be different for each latitude on the earth's surface. A sunchart is therefore latitude specific. The above suncharts, plotted for a latitude of 45 degrees, plot seven different curves which represent the sun's path during the different months of the year. The lowest curve represents the first day of winter (approximately December 21st). The highest curve represents the first day of summer (approximately June 21st). The other five curves each represent two months with about 30 to 31 days between each of the curves. The solar paths in the sunchart are defined as follows:

curve # approximate date
curve 1 (bottom) December 21 - first day of winter
curve 2 January 21 & November 20
curve 3 February 20 & October 21
curve 4 March 22 & September 21 - first days of spring & fall
curve 5 April 22 & August 21
curve 6 May 22 & July 21
curve 7 (top) June 21 - first day of summer

Southern latitude suncharts will be similar with the months reversed between summer and winter.

Times of day are located by drawing iso-time lines between the different curves on the sunchart. These values are provided in "solar time", which varies somewhat from the actual time in your area. Solar noon is defined as the time when the sun reaches its zeneth or highest point in the sky during the day. The other solar times are calculated by subtracting or adding hour intervals from this time. The actual time of solar noon varies according to your longitude (ie - where you sit longitudinally within you particular time zone), and whether or not you are on daylight savings time. It also varies slightly with time of year. In most cases, you will not be concerned about the actual time at which solar noon occurs. Charts and mathematical formulas can be used to convert between actual times and solar times.

Since the path that the sun takes across the sky is predictable mathematically, computer programs can be written to calculate and plot suncharts easily.


USING THE SUNCHART IN SOLAR DESIGN.

The sunchart is a useful design tool because it allows us to locate the sun's position in the sky at any time of day during any time of the year. To make the sunchart more useful, we can plot the skyline and other major obstructions onto it, and utilize this information to locate and orient buildings, windows, and solar collectors. This tool can also be useful for locating greenhouses, planning gardens and outdoor spaces, and even for designing custom sundials. Finally, by utilizing some simple overlays, we can use the sunchart to design and optimize shading devices and plants so that solar gain is realized in the winter when we want it, but minimized or eliminated in the summer when we don't want it.

Plotting the skyline on the sunchart makes the sunchart useful in predicting how buildings, trees, hills, and other obstacles will affect the amount of sunlight falling at a particular location. This makes the sunchart useful for locating homes, gardens, and solar collectors. Figure 3 shows a typical sunchart with a sample skyline sketched onto it.

Figure 3 illustrates how sketching a skyline and other objects onto a sunchart make it a useful tool in predicting how the objects will block the sun during the year.

Directions for plotting a skyline onto a sunchart:

Geographical obstacles are sometimes unavoidable. Many times, a portion of the sunchart may be blocked by a large object which cannot be removed or compensated for by changing locations. An example of this may be a large hill, mountain, building, or stand of trees. As mentioned above, figure 3 shows examples of these situations. If this occurs and no better building site is available, then the sunchart can be used to help orientate a building or solar collector to optimize the sun's energy that the collector receives. Using the sunchart with the appropriate skyline plotted onto it, approximate with your eye the azimuth angle at which the most direct light falls onto your window or collector. Orientate your building or solar collector accordingly. In the example shown in figure 3, a hill and some trees block the morning sun in the winter until about 11:00 AM solar time. A solar collector would need to be turned about 15 degrees west of south to make the best use of the sun's rays.

Constantly recurring meteorological conditions can also limit the amount of solar energy a site receives. In many locations, morning fog, marine layers, and similar meteorological conditions can block the sun until the later morning hours when the sun "burns" it off. If situations like this occur in your area, shade off the portion of your sunchart up to the approximate solar time when this condition usually disappears. Treat this shaded portion just as if it were part of the skyline, and use the above technique to again estimate the new azimuthal angles at which buildings or solar collectors should be oriented to compensate for these conditions and thereby optimize the collected solar energy.

Optimum solar collector elevation angles can also be approximated using the sunchart. Many solar engineering books provide rules of thumb for setting solar collector elevation angles. Unfortunately these rules of thumb apply only to very specific situations, and they do not account for the special situations that need to be taken into account. The sunchart will allow you to visually approximate the optimum solar collector elevation angle. Suppose we use the above sunchart (figure 3) as an example, and we would like to position a solar collector to gather energy during the winter months for heating purposes. We have already determined that a solar collector should be oriented about 15 degrees west of south. We now need to determine the elevation angle at which to point the solar collector to obtain maximum use of the sun's rays. If we use just the lower three curves (ie - the fall & winter curves), and then estimate an imaginary elevation line where the available sun falls equally above and below that line, then we can approximate the optimum solar collector elevation angle which we should use for collecting solar heat. In this case, the solar collector should be pointed approximately 10 to 15 degrees above the horizon to make the best use of the winter sun. If needed, a better calculation could be performed using SolarPhotons' SUN_OPT software.

The sunchart can also be used to perform shading design calculations. In many cases, passively solar heated buildings can be designed to collect solar energy during the cold fall and winter months, and yet, through the use of shading devices, reject the sun's energy during the hotter spring and summer months. The sunchart is a useful design tool for these applications. Two basic types of shading devices are used for this purpose. Horizontal overhangs, if properly designed, shade much of the window during the summer months when the sun is high in the sky, while letting in most or all of the sunlight during the winter months when it is a useful heat source. Vertical columns along side a window can also be used to shade the window during the summer months while letting sunlight through during the winter months. Plants properly located can also be useful to block summer sun while allowing winter sun through. With some geometrical knowledge, and a little patience, one can plot out the effects of these and similar shading devices on the sunchart. Computer software can also perform these shading calculations and plot them directly onto the sunchart.

Figure 4 shows the geometry of a window where horizontal overhangs and vertical columns are used to control the sun's rays entering it throughout the year.
Figure 4 shows an example where a horizontal overhang and two vertical columns are used to control the amount of light entering a window throughout the year. Let us now look at the effects of placing a two foot overhang one foot above a four foot by four foot south facing window. In addition to the overhang, a one foot vertical column is placed at a one foot distance on each side of the window. Figures 5, 6, and 7 show how this overhang and these columns affect the shade falling onto the window. The dark areas of the charts are shaded or partially shaded. The dark areas on figure 5 are 100% shaded; they are at least 50% shaded in figure 6; they have some shade in figure 7. Conversely, the open areas in figure 5 receive some sunlight; they receive at least 50% of the sunlight falling on them in figure 6; and they receive 100% of the sunlight falling on them in figure 7. Notice that this window design receives 100% of the sun falling on it during the three coldest months, thereby warming the interior of the house, while having much of its solar gain eliminated during the three hotest months when it is not desired.

Figure 5 - South facing shading diagram with a 100% shading factor.
Figure 6 - South facing shading diagram with a 50% shading factor.
Figure 7 - South facing shading diagram with a 0% shading factor.
Figure 8 - Southwest facing shading diagram with a 50% shading factor.
The above shading calculations can also be done for windows that do not face south. Figure 8 shows an example of how the same overhang and column geometry would affect the sun entering a four foot by four foot window facing in a south westerly direction. This shading chart was made for a 50% shading factor.


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Copyright © 1995 & 2006 by Thomas M. Crawford
All Rights Reserved

updated 12/3/2006