News Article In Malaysian Newspapers

Our hottest designer
REAL HOT....Teoh with the world's most efficient solar water
heater.
Time magazine has named him among its "Heroes for the Planet"
By Lam Seng Fatt
The hottest solar water heater in the world is proudly designed
and made in Malaysia and can be tested at a double-link house
in Subang Jaya where a demo model has been set up. Striking when
the iron is hot, the designer has now set his sights on creating
a solar-powered air-conditioner.
Inventing the hottest, most efficient solar water heater in the
world has won its designer Teoh Siang Teik not only an international
patent by the World Intellectual Property Organisation but also
the honour of being named one of Time magazine's Heroes for The
Planet last month.
Brandnamed Microsolar, Teoh's solar water heater beats the competition
by more than 20 deg. On one recent extremely hot day, the water
was as hot as 82 deg.
During the coldest period of any day, which is at dawn, his solar
heater produces 60 deg. water which is some 20 degrees hotter
than the maximum temperature of water from a normal electrical
water heater in the shower. His solar water heater comes without
any electrical back-up heating coil.
Other solar water heaters (except a Nasa-designed system using
freon heating fluid) have electrical water heaters as back-up
in case the water is not hot enough during rainy or cloudy days.
In some cases, the inefficiency is made worse by clogged pipes
due to sedimentation and the water is often heated more by electricity
than the sun and power costs incurred do not justify buying such
solar water heaters.
Not to mention that such poorly-designed solar water heaters are
not "green" and actually add to pollution by consuming
electrical power.
Teoh, an architect and "greenie", modified existing
technology to create his solar water heater. Most designs are
based on a 1976 Japanese patent which is an inefficient design
in that hot water is forced to travel an unnecessarily long distance
through pipes to get to the water tank.
In his patented design, the pipes travel
straight into the tank and the efficiency of the thermosyphonic
flow is reflected in the hotter water. To make it even hotter,
his newer version solar water heater has extra black plastic pipes
on a reflective surface to trap infrared rays and heat the water
a little more even during cloudy days. All the pipes are covered
with double glazing for the greenhouse effect to trap even more
heat.
The main set of pipes are copper sandwiched with aluminium for
maximum conductivity and they last longer than HDPE polymers.
At the bottom of the panel, the pipes can be opened to drain away
sediments.
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