Students engineer solar homes that warm in winter freeze

solar home warms in winter
Students work on their mini solar homes, Southern Utah University, Cedar City, Utah, Fall 2015 | Photo courtesy of Southern Utah University, St. George News

CEDAR CITY — Heating up an introductory engineering class is Southern Utah University’s John Murray and his 23 students who successfully created seven mini homes, heating each with solar energy this past semester.

Murray, an associate professor of engineering, provided his class with the opportunity to build solar homes to test whether or not the homes could maintain a warm internal temperature in harsh winter conditions. With temperatures dropping below freezing, the engineering students successfully kept their mini homes warm.

John Murray with solar students
John Murray helps his students build mini solar homes, Southern Utah University, Cedar City, Utah, date unspecified | Photo courtesy of Southern Utah University, St. George News

“The homes were heated by the incoming sun passing through a south-facing window during the day,” Murray said. “Incoming solar energy is stored in the homes using cans of water. At night, with the home tops closed, the cans re-radiate the stored energy, keeping the interiors warm.”

After measuring data over a three-day period during the first week of December, the class determined the project a success as the internal temperatures had much less variation than the external.

While many of the students are not engineering majors and are in their freshman year at SUU, each student participated equally in all aspects of design and construction, leaving Murray impressed with their ability to tackle difficult engineering problems and find solutions.

“Student willingness to do battle with heat transfer equations during their first year at SUU is, I believe, laudable,” Murray said.

Nayla Rhein, a freshman biology major, participated in all facets of the project and was impressed with Murray’s ability to create an experience where she was challenged while learning new aspects about engineering.

“This project helped me realize you don’t need advanced engineering skills to be able to create and design your ideas,” Rhein said. “I think what made this project special was the passion of Dr. Murray and the way he got us involved. He didn’t tell us what to do. He pushed us to be creative and find our own answers.”

Alex Massine, a sophomore mathematical science major, said he gained a lot of knowledge about engineering through the project, specifically about how heat comes into a home and how heat is lost.

“The goal was to balance the gains and losses to maintain a consistent temperature in our solar homes,” Massine said. “We were able to successfully accomplish this goal, and I enjoyed gaining engineering skills in the process.”

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2 Comments

  • wilbur December 20, 2015 at 8:04 pm

    ….Elementary, my dear Watson….

  • .... December 20, 2015 at 9:34 pm

    Yes it is Mr Ed

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