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Swimming pool absorbers, on the other hand, are usually
made of plastic (mostly EPDM, but also of polypropylene and
polyethylene), as the lower temperatures involved do not require
greater heat capacity.
Heating and storage are united in a reservoir collector.
Arrays of reservoir collectors do not need circulating pumps
or regulating mechanisms, as the drinking water is warmed
and stored right in the collector.

Highly efficient absorber surfaces
Absorbers are usually black, as dark surfaces demonstrate
a particularly high degree of light absorption. The level
of absorption indicates the amount of short-wave solar radiation
being absorbed that means not being reflected. As the absorber
warms up to a temperature higher than the ambient temperature,
it gives off a great part of the accumulated solar energy
in form of long-wave heat rays. The ratio of absorbed energy
to emitted heat is indicated by the degree of emission.
In order to reduce energy loss through heat emission, the
most efficient absorbers have a selective surface coating.
This coating enables the conversion of a high proportion of
the solar radiation into heat, simultaneously reducing the
emission of heat.
The usual coatings provide a degree of absorption of over
90%. Solar paints which can be mechanically applied to the
absorbers (with either brushes or sprays), are less or not
at all selective, as they have a high level of emission. Galvanically
applied selective coatings include black chrome, black nickel,
and aluminum oxide with nickel. Relatively new is a titanium-nitride-oxide
layer, which is applied via steam in a vacuum process. This
type of coating stands out not only because of its quite low
emission rates, but also because its production is emission-free
and energy-efficient.

Flat-plate Collectors
A flat-plate collector consists of an absorber, a transparent
cover, a frame, and insulation. Usually an iron-poor solar
safety glass is used as a transparent cover, as it transmits
a great amount of the short-wave light spectrum.
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Sketch of a flat-plate collector
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Simultaneously, only very little of the heat emitted by the
absorber escapes the cover (greenhouse effect).
In addition, the transparent cover prevents wind and breezes
from carrying the collected heat away (convection). Together
with the frame, the cover protects the absorber from adverse
weather conditions. Typical frame materials include aluminum
and galvanized steel; sometimes fiberglass-reinforced plastic
is used.
The insulation on the back of the absorber and on the side
walls lessens the heat loss through conduction. Insulation
is usually of polyurethane foam or mineral wool, though sometimes
mineral fiber insulating materials like glass wool, rock wool,
glass fiber or fiberglass are used.
Flat collectors demonstrate a good price-performance ratio,
as well as a broad range of mounting possibilities (on the
roof, in the roof itself, or unattached).
In order to reduce heat loss within the frame by convection,
the air can be pumped out of the collector tubes. Such collectors
then can be called evacuated-tube collectors. They must be
re-evacuated once every one to three years.
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