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A Trombe wall is a sun-facing wall built from material that can act as a thermal mass such as stone, concrete, adobe or water tanks combined with an air space, insulated glazing and vents to form a large solar thermal collector.
During the day sunlight shines through the glazing and hits the surface of the thermal mass, warming it by absorption. The air between the glazing and the thermal mass warms (via conduction) and rises, taking heat with it (convection). The warmer air moves through vents at the top of the wall and into the living area while cool air from the living area enters at vents near the bottom of the wall.
At night a one way flap on the bottom vent prevents backflow which could act to cool the living area and heat stored in the thermal mass radiates into the living area.
Common modifications to the Trombe wall include:
It is an example of passive solar heating, and is named after the French inventor stub. You can help BambooWeb by .