1 / 25

Ductless Heat Pumps in Residential Applications Proposed Research Plan

Ductless Heat Pumps in Residential Applications Proposed Research Plan. Introduction. Small multi or variable speed compressor .75 to 3 tons Small footprint for outdoor compressor Small variable speed indoor air handler Wall or ceiling mounted, by zone

brant
Download Presentation

Ductless Heat Pumps in Residential Applications Proposed Research Plan

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. Ductless Heat Pumps in Residential Applications Proposed Research Plan

  2. Introduction • Small multi or variable speed compressor • .75 to 3 tons • Small footprint for outdoor compressor • Small variable speed indoor air handler • Wall or ceiling mounted, by zone • Very low power fan and fan motor, no duct • Up to three single zone fans with larger capacity equipment • Refrigerant lines connect compressor to individual air handlers • Individual controls allow quick temperature adjustment, generally with remote device • Variable speed allows unit to control temperature of output and adapt to unfavorable climate conditions

  3. Performance • 2006 Federal Standards require that this equipment meet a HSPF rating of 7.4 • With variable speed fans SEER ratings are very high • Largely the result of low speed fan operation for dehumidification • Not closely related to HSPF • One to three single zone air handlers

  4. Performance Ratings and Retail Price Summary: Single Zone Systems

  5. Performance Ratings and Retail Price Summary: Three Zone Systems

  6. Ductless Heat Pump Performance in Existing Homes Study 1 Objectives: • Evaluate performance details for the DHP installation in situ • Provide direct measure of capacity and COP in Northwest Climates. • Evaluate installation specifications and potential needs for commissioning for DHP control and interaction with existing zonal system • Assess the performance and energy savings for DHPs and assess predicted savings analysis from manufacturer’s data.

  7. Sample • Sample size would be about 6 units in similar climates to the other studies (Heating Zones 1 & 2). • Participants would be selected based on accessibility and willingness to accommodate one year data collection protocol • Target would be 2 homes per locality. • Focus on a typical DHP installation may have more than one zone. • Limit the DHPs to the HSPF rating above 7.7 with inverter driven compressor, air handlers. • Provide control specification and instruction for use of back-up electric zonal heat

  8. Monitoring Overview • Characterize energy use prior to installation (Utility bills, weather-normalized) • Limit program participation to customers with electric zonal heat. • Screen for wood heat and intermittent occupancy. • Install metering package that allows sub metering of DHW, DHP, electric zonal heat, and total energy. Integrated at hourly or daily level. • “Quad-metering” • Install metering on low voltage control circuits and other components of the DHP • Assess speed control of compressor and air handler(s). • Indoor and outdoor temperature integrated at the same level

  9. Monitoring Details • True power needed (inverter technology) • Temp control upstream of DHP • 24 VAC control of zonal electric heat before/after should be considered • Estimation of COP would require experiments to measure system airflow. • One time measurements at installation • Review of installation and maintenance literature. • About 16 channels of data should be sufficient.

  10. Site Data Collection • Cost information • Equipment costs • Installation costs • Equipment Specifications • Manufacturer, Model • Capacity • HSPF, SEER ratings • Home characteristics • Size • Heating system size, distribution, settings • Major appliance specs (including DHW) • Weatherization measures • DHP control sequence • Startup routine • Low ambient performance

  11. Analysis • Develop detailed assessment of COP and dependence on temperature, installation, and operator controls • Review relative contribution of DHP and electric resistance zonal • Estimate net cooling contribution • Develop savings based on metered results and compare to gross savings analysis from total billing analysis.

  12. Timeline • Install equipment early 2008 • Collect data from winter 2008 through winter 2009. • Evaluate data and summarize results, Spring 2009

  13. Budgets • Incentives: • Target: 50% of installed costs ~($2000/unit) • Total budget: $15,000 • Monitoring: • Instruments: $2500/home • Installation and home review: $3000/home • Total Monitoring: $35,000 • Data collection: • $30,000 • Analysis and report: • $50,000 • Total Budget, including detailed DHP monitoring: $130,000 • Research Budget - $115,000

  14. Ductless Heat Pump Performance in Existing Homes Study 2 Objectives: • Establish applicability to existing zonal electric homes • Develop costs and specifications for use in applying DHPs to existing homes • Establish installation specifications for DHP control and interaction with existing zonal system • Assess the performance and energy savings for DHPs including

  15. Sample • Sample size would be determine to meet a 90% confidence interval. • Participants would be stratified by each of four localities (utilities) • Target sample size would be 25-40 homes per locality (100 to 160 total sample size) • Assumes savings CV of about 0.3 to 0.4. • Assumes small climate variation in each locality • Locations: Heating Zones 1 & 2

  16. Monitoring • Develop energy use prior to installation (Utility bills, weather normalized) • Limit program participation to customers with electric zonal heat. • Screen for wood heat and intermittent occupancy. • Install metering package that allows sub metering of DHW, DHP, Electric zonal heat, and total energy. Integrated at hourly or daily level. • “Quad-metering” • Indoor and outdoor temperature integrated at the same level

  17. Data Collection • Collect actual cost information • Equipment costs, • Installation costs • Equipment Specifications • Manufacture, Model • Capacity • HSPF, SEER ratings • Home characteristics • Size • Heating system size, distribution, settings • Equipment specs • Weatherization measures • DHP setup control sequence

  18. Analysis • Develop savings estimates from billing analysis comparison before and after installation • Review relative contribution of DHP and Electric zonal • Estimate net cooling offset (from metering) • Develop savings based on metered results and compare to gross savings analysis from total billing analysis.

  19. Budgets • Incentives: • Target: 50% of installed costs ~($1200/unit) • Total budget: $140,000 • Monitoring: • Instruments: $1300/home • Installation and home review: $1200/home • Total Monitoring: $300,000 • Data collection: • $60,000 • Analysis and report: • $60,000 • Total Budget, Retrofit DHP measure: $560,000 • Research Budget- $420,000

  20. Ductless Heat Pump Performance in New Residential ConstructionStudy 3 Objectives • Establish applicability for heating and cooling new single family homes. • Develop costs and specifications for use in applying DHPs to new homes • Establish installation specifications for DHP control and interaction with supplemental zonal system or other back-up heating • Assess the performance and energy savings for DHPs including supplemental space heat and cooling requirements (offsets).

  21. Sample • Sample size would be determine to meet a 90% confidence interval with a modest CV (~.25) • Recruitment should focus on 15-20 (100) homes in six climate zones (Ht. Zone 1/Cool Z1-Z3 & Ht. Zone 2/Cool Z1-3) • Energy Star envelope with “Hybrid TCO” • Townhouses and smaller single family homes (~2000 sf)

  22. Monitoring • Install metering package that allows sub metering of DHW, DHP, Electric zonal heat, and total energy. Integrated at hourly or daily level. • “Quad-metering” • Indoor and outdoor temperature integrated at the same level • Track unusual occupant events (e.g. vacation, extra occupants, change of occupants)

  23. Data Collection • Collect actual cost information • Equipment costs, • Installation costs • Equipment Specifications • Manufacture, Model • Capacity • HSPF, SEER ratings • Temperature and capacity curves • Home characteristics • Size • Heating system size, distribution, settings • Equipment specs (DHW, Appliances, etc) • DHP control sequence

  24. Analysis • Develop savings estimates from billing analysis comparison before and after installation • Review relative contribution of DHP and Electric zonal • Estimate net cooling offset (from metering) • Develop savings based on metered results and compare to gross savings analysis from total billing analysis. • Assess performance relative to modeled estimates using SEEM.

  25. Budgets • Incentives: • Target 50% of installation costs ~($2500/unit) • $125,000 • Monitoring: • Quad-metering, $1300/unit • Installation (with home review), $1200/unit • 100 units, $250,000 • Data collection: • $40,000 • Analysis & report • $60,000 • Total Budget, New construction: $575,000 • Research Budget - $350,000

More Related