1 / 19

Geoexchange at CMU

Geoexchange at CMU. 2012. Colorado Mesa University. Regional public higher education institution 3 campuses in Grand Junction, CO. Main campus 78 acres and 1.5 million s.f. under roof. Enrollment of just over 9,000 students. Why Geoexchange at CMU?.

bessie
Download Presentation

Geoexchange at CMU

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Geoexchange at CMU 2012

  2. Colorado Mesa University • Regional public higher education institution • 3 campuses in Grand Junction, CO. • Main campus • 78 acres and 1.5 million s.f. under roof. • Enrollment of just over 9,000 students

  3. Why Geoexchange at CMU? • The use of G.S.H.P. at CMU began in the fall of 2007. • In part, resulted from Governor Ritter’s Greening State Government initiative that called for a 20% reduction in State government energy use by June 30, 2012. • “state government should lead by example…”

  4. Geo & Energy Independence Increased to 1,800 Tons of Heating and 1,600 Tons of Cooling Thru Geo-Exchange Energy Independence Outcomes: Increase to 1.2 MW of Solar Electricity 192 Jobs Created/Saved; $37M in Economic Activity 10,040 Tons of CO2 Emissions Reduced Per Year

  5. Was Geo Accepted by All? • The administration at CMU was not only open to the concept of GX, they pushed to see how far the concept could be taken. • The decision was made during the summer of 2007 to expand geo to include additional drill fields and a system of pipes that would connect drill fields to buildings across campus.

  6. Planning for a Central Loop Initial loop would move (up to) 1,500 tons. * Source: Cary Smith, Sound Geothermal

  7. Planning for a Central Loop Quantum Group Engineering LLC The Results were very good. The earth conditions were towards the upper end for soils on the Western Slope. TC – 1.24 btu/hr-ft-oF Diffusivity: .09 ft2/day Deep Earth: 61 – 64.5 oF

  8. Constructing a Central Loop 8” dia. pipes between central loop & H.H Drill Field Drill Rig

  9. Additional Drill Fields Pipes connecting Bore holes Drill fields south of A.C.B.

  10. CMU’s Community Hybrid GX System -Hybrid System. A hybrid GX system is a heating and cooling system that couples renewable energy system(s) with conventional technology. -CMU’s hybrid GX system includes drill fields, boilers and cooling towers. -Three separate drill fields -234,000 lineal feet of geo-exchange tubing -5,000 lineal feet of 18” diameter loop field pipe (central loop)

  11. Community Hybrid GX System 3 (or more) “Least Energy Path(s)”: • The building shares energy with itself. • The building shares energy with other buildings (take energy from or give energy to the central loop). • The SYSTEM calls for assistance from renewable (central loop or solar). • The SYSTEM calls for assistance from conventional equipment. * Source: Cary Smith, Sound Geothermal

  12. Buildings Connected -Academic Classroom Building (56k sf) -North Residence Hall (110ksf) -University Center (100k sf)  -Wubben Hall (43,375 s.f.) -Wubben /Science Ctr. Exp. (26,222 sf) -Houston Hall renovation/addition (80,940 sf) -Bunting Residence Hall(72,500).

  13. Central Loop Student Center Classrooms Dormitories * Source: Cary Smith, Sound Geothermal

  14. Building Assets • Houston Hall (Existing) • Add new mechanical rooms • Add central loop tie in • Add one new borefield • Add future borefield stub-out • Heat exchanger to couple existing boilers to central loop Existing Thermal Assets: Building Three Boilers Rooftop Cooling Retrofit: Water-Water GXHP, fan coils and chilled water coils. * Source: Cary Smith, Sound Geothermal

  15. Main Central Loop mechanical room. Chiller Cooling tower #1 Central Loop Pumps Boilers Chiller Building CT #2 * Source: Cary Smith, Sound Geothermal

  16. Single button Campus Demand Limiting: Campus wide load shedding during peak events. * Source: Cary Smith, Sound Geothermal

  17. Community Hybrid GX System Current Project Size: 500k ft2 2,400 gross tons 25 miles of loop 6 boilers 3 fluid coolers Academic Classroom Building – 56k s.f. North Ave. Student Housing - 110k s.f. Science Center & Wubben – 69.5k s.f. University Center – 100k s.f. Bunting Ave. Student Housing – 72.5k s.f. Houston Hall – 80.9k s.f. * Source: Cary Smith, Sound Geothermal

  18. Invested to Date? -Drill Fields - $4.4 million -Central Loop - $1.2 million -Main System Pumps -$713k -Global Management System - $200k -Total - $6.5 million -Energy savings in excess of $300k / year  * -Conservative estimates show our Carbon footprint reducing by 8,188 metric tons through the use of GX -Estimated Load-shed Value (Per event) $5,000 - $10,000 *($.05/kWh, consumption of 22 kWh/s.f./yr for trad. hvac vs. 10 kWh/s.f./yr for GSHP).

  19. Why Geoexchange at CMU? • CMU, like many other business, continues looking for ways to be more competitive; to offer uncompromising quality at a price point lower than that of our competitors. • Reducing and/or conserving energy through the use of geo, while generating energy on-site through the use of solar, reduces our Carbon footprint, creates jobs locally and saves CMU money.

More Related