Big Red said:
Is it possible for me to heat water with some type of system that can use the heat trapped in my ceiling cavity? If so what would be the best way of doing this?
Hi Big Red,
You certainly can utilise the heat in your roof cavity.
First bear in mind that, to transfer heat from one medium to another, you need a temperature differential between the two and you need time. To make the excercise more effective you also need a large surface area over which heat transfer will take place.
I assume you have a cold water storage tank in your roof and this is fed directly from the mains water supply; also that the stored water is gravity-fed to the outlet points (baths, wash basins, toilets, etc.).
The following is my suggestion:
Lay lots of flexible piping throughout the roof area. connect one end to bottom of the storage tank and fit a small circulating pump at that end. Connection the other end to the top of the tank.
When the pump is operated, cool water will be drawn from the tank, warmed during circulation and the warm water will be returned to the top of the tank.
The pump should be switched off when ambient temperatures drop at night time. This can be done manually or by time switch or thermostatic switch.
The piping should be layed such that the hot air can circulate around it and contact the entire surface area. The piping should preferably rise constantly from cool end to warm end to avoid air locks or pockets and to assist flow.
The circulating pump may be a standard unit as used in central heating systems; probably about 60 or 100 Watt.
The selection of piping may need a little research, depending on what is available in you locality. I said flexible piping for ease of installation. The colour should be black or dark to assist heat absorbtion. The pipe wall should be thin as possible to minimise resistance to heat transfer. 1/2" or 3/4" HDPE (high density polypropylene) is probably the most practical.
The above should give you water at about 10 degrees C below the roof space air temperature. I would expect the savings in water heating bills to pay for the materials cost in the first year of operation.
Black mild steel piping is good but tends to be more expensive and requires greater pipe-fitting skills.
Please be aware that, while this system is in operation, you will not have cold water in your taps. i.e. no cold showers on a hot day! You should still have drinking water at the kitchen sink which is usually connected to the mains supply.
Caution: Whereas the efficiency of the system increases in proportion to the lingth of circulation piping installed, you should be careful not to overload the ceiling structure.
Hope this helps.