Gəlin Birləşək
Sizə suallarınızı cavablandırmaq və məqsədlərinizə çatmaqda kömək etmək üçün buradayıq
In every commercial energy project there is a moment when someone asks the same question:
"Should we install PV? Or a heat pump?"
It sounds like the right question. But it is fundamentally misguided.
Hotels, hospitals, residential complexes, worker camps, laundries, campuses—they do not consume electricity as their final purpose. They consume comfort, water temperature, sterilization, showers, pools, meals, staff facilities. The core output is heat.
When you treat a building as an electrical appliance, PV works.
When you treat it as a real environment, PV alone collapses.
This is why, in every serious project we design, the conversation eventually returns to one simple principle: Real buildings need hybrid solar systems. Not single-source solutions.
Photovoltaics are brilliant at what they do:
But PV has two structural weaknesses:
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests. cURL Too many subrequests. cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests. cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
| cURL Too many subrequests. | cURL Too many subrequests. | cURL Too many subrequests. |
|---|---|---|
| PV | Makes electricity Cannot direct heat |
Suffers from high surface temperatures |
| İsitmə Pompası | Makes heat Hates cold inlet temperature |
Very sensitive to operating cycles |
| PVT | Improves PV electrical performance Generates hot water continuously |
Stabilizes heat pump input |
PVT is not "better." It is the missing piece.
Let's be brutally honest about ROI:
Great where: Net-metering exists, roof space abundant, stable electricity price, low water heating demand
Terrible where: DHW demand constant, net-metering gone, CAPEX to kWh revenue capped
Great when: Input water > 25°C, load moderate, cycles steady
Falls apart when: Inlet < 15–18°C, rapid peak demand, daily start–stop cycles
Great when: Any building needs heat, roof space scarce, irradiation high, backup costs painful
It is the only one whose benefit increases with demand.
Daily laundry + SPA. Heat pump installed two years prior. Energy bill acceptable in winter, catastrophic in summer.
They added PV to offset it. It helped… on paper.
Peak season reality:
"Why are you heating from 20°C?"
A simple 40 m² hybrid PVT array:
No magic. Just alignment with reality.
PVT → Buffer Tank → Heat Pump → Boiler
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests.
cURL Too many subrequests. cURL Too many subrequests.
Soletks Günəş cURL Too many subrequests.