HEROES FOR
THE PLANET / DESIGN
T E O H S
I A N G T E I K
Powered
by the Sun: Hot Water on the Cheap
KEEPING WARM
Heating water with solar power has become cheaper and more efficient, thanks
to an architect who dabbles in engineering.
By JOHN COLMEY
KUALA LUMPUR
TEOH SIANG TEIK DIDN'T SET OUT TO DESIGN THE WORLD'S most powerful
solar water heater. He just wanted to go trekking. As an architecture
student in Scotland in 1979, the young Malaysian was looking for a way
to prolong a visit to Nepal when a local businessman asked him to design
a hotel in a rural area with no electricity. His energy-efficient solution
won first prize from Scotland's Royal Incorporation of Architects. He returned
with his architecture degree and designed 69 rural building for the Nepalese
government, incorporating solar water heating. "My professors had told
me to leave engineering to engineers and be an architect," Teoh recalls.
"I was just looking for a way to save money on materials."
That quest resulted in a stunningly simple engineering breakthrough. At
the time, there was essentially one way to build solar water heaters, using
a 1976 Japanese patent that is still commonly applied today. In that basic
design, an array of tubes in a flat glass panel is placed on a slope
or roof and connected to a water tank. The water in the tubes is heated
by the sun, rises slowly and enters a pipe running across the top of the
panel, where it pushes forward and empties into the tank. The circle is
completed when cold water is forced out of the bottom of the tank into
a pipe running to the bottom of the panel. From there it begins the journey
through the panel and back up to the tank again. Standing on the roof of
one his houses in Nepal, Teoh was watching the hot water rise and
shoot into a black 55-gallon drum when he realized how much heat was being
lost pushing the water through the system. Says Teoh: "The
first rule of solar water heating was that the tank was separate from the
panel" and connected by a single tube. "I knew there had to be a more efficient
way."
There was. After pondering the problem for several years, Teoh designed
a heater in which each tube in the panel pours hot water directly into
the tank. That shortens the path the water has to travel by nearly
a meter and thus slashes the energy loss in transport. Building
on the notion of reducing resistance to hot water flow, Teoh's research
over the next decade led to several more design improvements.
For example, he added an additional lower panel with exposed tubes suspended
over a mirror that allows the heater to receive additional sunlight
and even work on a cloudy day.
Teoh's solar water heater, which was granted one of three international
patents issued by the World Intellectual Property Organization (under
the Patent Cooperation Treaty) in 1997, out-performs the competition.
It guarantees a water temperature of 60-78 deg. -- as opposed to the
previous 50-60 deg. ceiling--more than enough for an entire family of
five to take two hot showers a day. Unlike other solar water heaters,
it doesn't need an electric-powered backup, which on cloudy days can
make operating costs sky-rocket. And Teoh's model can be built using
materials available at a local hardware store. Such simplicity allows
the company Teoh has set up in his home, Microsolar Malaysia, to sell
heaters for as little as $1,000. That's one-third the cost of a more
technologically sophisticated solar model designed by the U.S. National
Aeronautics and Space Administration. Teoh's design not only produces
hot water without burning fossil fuels, but it operates more cheaply
than other solar models. In the first 10 years, his heater costs a family
of five $100 annually, compared with $200 for a conventional solar unit
with an electric booster and just under that for an all-electric model.
"It works," says one of Microsolar Malaysia's 1,000 customers, Affendy
Th'ng, a Kuala Lumpur sales executive. Affendy went solar to help the
environment and to avoid buying individual electric heaters for his
three bathrooms. He now enjoys "a substantial savings on my monthly
bill."
More importantly, Teoh's innovation could unlock many more, including solar
air-conditioners. Until now, finding an efficient way to use the sun's
energy to cool air has eluded engineers because the water temperature must
be maintained at an average 75 deg. in order to run existing solar
air-conditioning models. Currently, five to eight panels are required to
reach that temperature, far too cumbersome and costly for a typical roof,
where Microsolar could potentially do it with two to four panels. Many
air-conditioners now use a volatile gas like freon, which is known to contribute
to global warming. So a freon-free model could be a boon for the environment,
as well as an important new industry for Malaysia, already a major manufacturer
of air-conditioners.
Though Teoh has gained international recognition for his stroke of solar
engineering, he remains very much an architect, designing buildings
throughout Asia. Microsolar Malaysia plans to franchise his low-cost
water heaters to the developing world, beginning with Botswana this
year. Nonetheless, Teoh rejects the nation that he is a hero. "I don't
like the word " says the inventor. "I just want to be somebody who makes
a small contribution to the world." And if he is lucky, he may still
have time to go trekking, although the demands of fame are making that
increasingly difficult".
TIME, APRIL 5,
1999
|