A solar cooker DIY project for India is among the simplest and most cost-effective ways to harness the sun’s energy for everyday cooking. With India receiving 4–7 kWh/m² of solar radiation daily across most of the country, a well-built parabolic or box-type solar cooker can boil water, cook rice, dal, and vegetables without any fuel cost. This guide covers both design types with step-by-step construction instructions suited to Indian conditions.
Table of Contents
- Solar Cooking Basics for India
- Box Type Solar Cooker: Build Guide
- Parabolic Solar Cooker: Build Guide
- Reflector Materials Available in India
- Cooking Tips and Temperature Guide
- Parabolic vs Box Type: Comparison
- Adding Arduino Solar Tracking
- Frequently Asked Questions
Solar Cooking Basics for India
Solar cookers concentrate or trap solar radiation to heat cooking vessels. India’s diverse climate means performance varies: Rajasthan and Gujarat see 6–7 kWh/m²/day (excellent), while coastal Kerala and the North-East average 4–5 kWh/m²/day (still sufficient for cooking). The Indian Standard IS 13429 defines performance criteria for solar cookers sold in India.
A box-type cooker reaches 100–140°C — sufficient for slow cooking. A parabolic dish concentrator can reach 200–400°C at the focal point, enabling frying, stir-frying, and even roasting.
Box Type Solar Cooker: Build Guide
Materials Required
- Outer box: 60cm × 60cm × 30cm plywood or MDF (12mm thick)
- Inner box: 50cm × 50cm × 20cm (black-painted aluminium sheet, 0.5mm)
- Insulation: 50mm glass wool or crumpled newspaper between boxes
- Glazing: 4mm tempered glass or UV-stable polycarbonate sheet
- Reflector flap: aluminised Mylar or mirror-finish aluminium foil on a hinged board
- Black cookware (dark anodised or painted vessels only)
Construction Steps
- Build the outer box from 12mm plywood. Leave a 50mm gap on all sides from the inner box dimensions.
- Line the inner box with aluminium sheet painted with heat-resistant black paint (available at any hardware store in India).
- Fill the gap between boxes with glass wool insulation. Line the bottom of the inner box with additional insulation.
- Fit the tempered glass lid with a rubber gasket seal. The glass is the key heat-trap — double glazing improves performance by 20%.
- Attach the reflector flap at 45° angle on the lid edge facing the sun. Use aluminised Mylar (available on Amazon India for ₹200–₹400 per roll).
- Paint the exterior with weather-resistant paint. Orient the cooker facing south at a tilt angle equal to your latitude.
Expected performance: 100–140°C in 30–45 minutes on a clear day. Ideal for rice, dal, vegetables, and slow-cooked dishes. Cooking time is 1.5–2× compared to gas flame.
Parabolic Solar Cooker: Build Guide
A parabolic dish concentrates parallel sun rays to a single focal point. Achieving the correct parabolic curve is the main challenge in DIY construction.
DIY Parabolic Dish Method (Petal Technique)
- Cut 16–24 identical petal-shaped pieces from 0.5mm aluminium sheet. Each petal: 60cm long, curved at the edges.
- Arrange petals around a central hub to form an approximate paraboloid. For a 1.2m diameter dish, focal length ≈ 30cm.
- Attach petals to a circular GI wire frame with rivets or pop rivets.
- Apply adhesive aluminium foil (mirror finish) over each petal for high reflectivity (80–85% with foil vs 90–95% with glass mirror tiles).
- Mount the dish on a pipe stand with altitude-azimuth adjustment (2-axis tracking).
- Locate the focal point by reflecting sunlight — a small bright spot forms at ~30cm from dish centre for a 1.2m dish.
- Mount a GI wire cooking grill or pot holder at the focal point.
Focal Length Calculation
# Parabola equation: y = x² / (4f)
# where f = focal length
# For a dish of diameter D = 1.2m and rim angle 45°:
# f = D / (4 × tan(rim_angle/2))
# f = 1.2 / (4 × tan(22.5°))
# f = 1.2 / (4 × 0.4142)
# f = 1.2 / 1.657 = 0.724m ≈ 72cm
# For shallower dish (easier to build), rim angle 30°:
# f = 1.2 / (4 × tan(15°)) = 1.2 / 1.072 = 1.12m
Reflector Materials Available in India
- Mirror-finish aluminium sheet (1mm): 85–88% reflectivity. Available at metal dealers for ₹150–₹200/kg. Best for parabolic dishes.
- Aluminised Mylar film: 90–92% reflectivity. Lightweight, flexible. ₹300–₹500/roll (1m × 5m). Ideal for box cooker reflector flap.
- Glass mirror tiles (25mm × 25mm): 92–95% reflectivity. Heavy but durable. ₹80–₹120 per sheet (300mm × 300mm). Excellent for permanent installations.
- Chromate-treated aluminium foil: 75–80% reflectivity. Widely available in India. Low cost but degrades in 1–2 years outdoors.
- Commercial solar reflector film (3M Vikuiti): 98% reflectivity. Expensive but professional-grade. Used in commercial solar cookers.
Cooking Tips and Temperature Guide
- Use only black cookware (dark anodised aluminium, cast iron, or black-painted steel)
- Place food in the cooker 30 minutes before desired eating time
- Best cooking window: 10am–3pm IST on clear days
- Add 10–20% extra water since evaporation losses are higher
- Preheat the cooker/dish for 10 minutes before placing food
- For parabolic type, adjust dish every 20–30 minutes to track the sun
Parabolic vs Box Type: Comparison
| Feature | Box Type | Parabolic |
|---|---|---|
| Max Temperature | 100–140°C | 200–400°C |
| Cooking Capacity | 3–5 kg (family) | 1–3 kg per batch |
| Tracking Required | Every 30–60 min | Every 10–20 min |
| DIY Cost (INR) | ₹1,500–₹3,000 | ₹3,000–₹6,000 |
| Suitable for | Boiling, slow cooking | Frying, quick cooking |
| Wind sensitivity | Low | High |
Adding Arduino Solar Tracking
An Arduino-based 2-axis solar tracker can improve parabolic cooker efficiency by 30–40% by keeping the dish pointed at the sun automatically.
#include <Servo.h>
Servo azimuth, altitude;
int ldr1 = A0, ldr2 = A1; // East-West sensors
int ldr3 = A2, ldr4 = A3; // North-South sensors
int tolerance = 50;
void loop() {
int e = analogRead(ldr1), w = analogRead(ldr2);
int n = analogRead(ldr3), s = analogRead(ldr4);
// East-West adjustment
if (abs(e - w) > tolerance) {
if (e > w) azimuth.write(azimuth.read() + 1);
else azimuth.write(azimuth.read() - 1);
}
// North-South adjustment
if (abs(n - s) > tolerance) {
if (n > s) altitude.write(altitude.read() + 1);
else altitude.write(altitude.read() - 1);
}
delay(500);
}
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a solar cooker work on cloudy days?
Box-type cookers can still achieve 60–80°C on overcast days, enough for slow cooking and pasteurisation. Parabolic cookers need direct sunlight and are ineffective on cloudy days.
Is a solar cooker safe for Indian food?
Yes. Dal, rice, vegetables, khichdi, and even chapati can be made in solar cookers. Frying (poori, pakoda) requires a parabolic cooker reaching above 180°C. Roti requires a pre-heated black tawa on the parabolic focal point.
What is the lifespan of a DIY solar cooker?
A well-built box cooker with aluminium construction lasts 10–15 years. Replace the reflective foil every 2–3 years. Parabolic dish aluminium sheets last 5–7 years before reflectivity degrades significantly.
Are there any government schemes for solar cookers?
MNRE previously subsidised solar cookers under the Solar Thermal Programme. Currently (2026), direct consumer subsidies for cookers are limited, but some states offer awareness programmes. Institutional buyers (schools, hostels) can avail MNRE tenders.
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