Sunday, June 1, 2008
Principles Behind Solar Cookers
This is a continuation to the previous post about solar cookers. Here, we will be sharing some fo the principles behind solar cookers:
Most solar cookers work on basic principles:
sunlight is converted to heat energy that is retained for cooking.Fuel: Sunlight

Sunlight is the "fuel." A solar cooker needs an outdoor spot that is sunny for several hours and protected from strong wind, and where food will be safe. Solar cookers don't work at night or on cloudy days.
Convert sunlight to heat energyDark surfaces get very hot in sunlight, whereas light surfaces don't. Food cooks best in dark, shallow, thin metal pots with dark, tight-fitting lids to hold in heat and moisture.

Retain heatA transparent heat trap around the dark pot lets in sunlight, but keeps in the heat. This is a clear, heat-resistant plastic bag or large inverted glass bowl (in panel cookers) or an insulated box with a glass or plastic window (in box cookers). Curved concentrator cookers typically don't require a heat trap.
Capture extra sunlight
One or more shiny surfaces reflect extra sunlight onto the pot, increasing its heat potential.
-Linh.
the sun left its mark!