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Responsible Use of Refrigerants in HVAC

PLEASE MUTE CELL PHONES. Responsible Use of Refrigerants in HVAC. Julian de Bullet ASHRAE Distinguished Lecturer Director of Industry Relations McQuay International 703-395-5054 julian.debullet@mcquay.com. It’s About the World…. Globally the Issues are the Same……….

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Responsible Use of Refrigerants in HVAC

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  1. PLEASE MUTE CELL PHONES Responsible Use of Refrigerants in HVAC Julian de Bullet ASHRAE Distinguished Lecturer Director of Industry Relations McQuay International 703-395-5054 julian.debullet@mcquay.com

  2. It’s About the World….. Globally the Issues are the Same……….

  3. History of Refrigerants • 1830s - Jacob Perkins - Vapor Compression (ether) • 1851 - John Gorie - Patent for Vapor Compression Cycle • 1859 R-717 / R-718 (Ammonia / Water) • 1866 CO2 - Naval Applications • 1873 - R-717 (Ammonia) Commercial Refrigeration - Karl Linde • 1875 - R-764 (Sulfur dioxide) • 1920s -R-600a (Isobutane) & R-290 (Propane) • 1922 - Willis Carrier - R-1130 (Dielene) • 1926 - R-30 (Methylene Chloride)

  4. Fluorocarbons • CFCs, HCFCs and HFCs • Limited Combinations • Adding Chlorine Or Bromine Increases ODP • Adding Fluorine Increases GWP • Adding Hydrogen Increases Flammability And Lowers Atmospheric Lifetime

  5. Ozone Depletion was Detected in the 70’s………..

  6. Refrigerants Circa 1987 • Common HVAC Refrigerants Include CFC-11, CFC-12 (ODP=1.0), HCFC-22 (ODP=0.05) • Chiller Efficiency 0.70-0.80 kW/ton • Low Pressure Chillers Lose 25% Of Charge Annually

  7. Montreal Protocol Corrective Measures • HFC-134a (ODP=0) Replaces CFC-12 for Chillers and HCFC-22 for most Commercial HVAC Systems • HCFC-123 (ODP=0.02) Replaces CFC-11 • These Chillers Tightened Up (High Efficiency Purge, Portable Refrigerant Vessels, Blankets etc.)

  8. 20 years later….Ozone Depletion Continues….. 2005 ‘Hole” was one of largest and deepest ever…. Latest NASA predictions delays recovery until 2068…..nearly 20 years later than previously believed…..

  9. Montreal Protocol –Changes Made on Friday September 21st, 2007 Phase Out Schedule – DevelopedCountries 100% Consumption cap reduced from 35% to 25% in 2010 80% 65% 60% Consumption 40% 25% 2015 Service Tail Review 20% 10% 0.5% 0% 2015 1996 2004 2010 2020 2030 Phase Out Schedule – Developing Countries 100% 90% Freeze Current: Consumption cap steadily reduced starting in 2015 80% 65% Previous: Consumption capped at 2015 levels until 2040 60% Consumption 40% 32.5% 20% 2.5% 0% 2013 2015 2020 2025 2030 2040 Note: acceleration shown in light blue

  10. AVAILABILITY OF REFRIGERANT(Dupont & ICI Projections) Tons (000) 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 HFC134a HFC410A HCFC22 HCFC123 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 Year

  11. And Don’t Forget HCFC-22 • HCFC-22 phase-out in 2010 for new equipment and 2020 for service tail production • Consider alternatives for HCFCs now • Recommended actions • Select high efficiency units that use zero ozone depleting refrigerants like HFC-410A, HFC-134a and HFC-407C

  12. HCFC-22 Issues- Clarification Allow the sale of window air conditioners, packaged terminal air conditioners, and some commercial refrigeration units after Jan. 1, 2010, if they were manufactured before Jan. 1, 2010. Stockpiling of this equipment is allowed under the rule. • Allow the sale of pre-charged appliance components and parts manufactured (in the traditional sense), such as condensing units, line sets, and expansion valves, used for servicing as long as they were manufactured before Jan. 1, 2010. Stockpiling of this equipment is allowed under the rule. • Ban the sale and installation on or after Jan. 1, 2010, of pre-charged R-22 air conditioners (such as split systems) and refrigeration appliances that require field charging. Contractors are advised not to stockpile this equipment. • Permit servicing and repair work that requires the refrigeration loop to be opened and closed. There was a question as to whether this activity would be banned because it could be interpreted as ‘manufacturing’ after the Jan. 1, 2010 deadline.”

  13. ASHRAE Standard 34

  14. ASHRAE 34 SAFETY GROUPS B3 A3 Propane Butane High Flammability LowFlammability No FlamePropagation A2 R-142b, 152a B2 Ammonia A1 R-11, 12,22, 114, 500, 134a B1 R-123, SO 2 Lower Toxicity Higher Toxicity

  15. Application Considerations Refrigerants & Compressors

  16. REFRIGERANT TRANSITION SO2 -NH3 CFCs HCFCs HFCs 1920s 1930s-1990s 1950s-2010s 1990s + toxic flammable • high chlorine • strong ozone depletion • strong global warming • 1974 – Molina-Rowland theory • 1987 – Montreal protocol • 1990 – CAA amendments • 1996 – total phaseout of CFCs no chlorine zero ozone depletion lower global warming • lower chlorine • lower ozone depletion • lower global warming • 2010 - phaseout of • HCFC-22 for new • equipment • 2020 - total phaseout • of HCFC-22 and New • HCFC -123 chillers.

  17. ASHRAE Standard 15

  18. ASHRAE Standard 15 What is ASHRAE 15? An industry standard that specifies safe design, construction, installation, and operation of refrigerating systems Establishes safeguards for life, limb, health, and property, and prescribes safety standards

  19. Mechanical Room Safety Check: Location of inlet vents in relation to exhaust outlets ? Location of roof drains ? Rupture disc outlet locations ? Is there a tight seal on doors ? Purge vents to outside ? Are safety rupture lines the right size ? Is access to mechanical room restricted ? Are drain valves connected to evacuation devices ? Are there any pit areas in the room ? Where do the floor drains empty to ?

  20. Mechanical Room Per ASHRAE 15 Relief discharge shall be located not less than 20 ‘ from ventilation opening and not less than 15’ above ground level (9.7.8) All indoor machinery rooms must be vented to the outdoors utilizing mechanical ventilation 98.13.3 & 4 Purge systems and relief devices must be vented to outside (8.16) Access to mechanical room shall be restricted. Tight fitting doors opening outward (self closing if the open into the building) adequate in number to ensure freedom of escape. No other openings that would permit passage of escaping refrigerant (8.13) Refrigerant sensors are located in areas where refrigerant vapor from a leak will be concentrated so as to provide warning at concentration not exceeding the refrigerant TLV-TWA The total amount of refrigerant stored in a machinery room in all containers not provided with relief valves & piped in accordance with standard shall not exceed 330 lb.. (11.5)

  21. What About GWP and Leakage Rates? For chillers, (Indirect) global warming gas emissions (CO2) at the power plant account for more than 96% of the Total Equivalent Warming Impact Energy Efficiency Oak Ridge National Laboratory (AFEAS/DOE) Energy and Global Warming Impacts of HFC Refrigerants and Emerging Technologies Nov 1997

  22. Number of Leaks Detected per Unit

  23. Climate Change & HFC Refrigerants • GWP=How much a given mass of GHG contributes to global warming • HFC emissions covered under the Kyoto Protocol – Represent less than 2% of all GHG emissions • 1 kg R-12 = 10,600 kg CO2 • 1 kg R-134a = 1,430 kg CO2 • 1 kg R-410A = 2,088 kg CO2 • 1 kg R-404A = 3,922 kg CO2

  24. Climate Initiatives Waxman/Markey House Bill- Energy Efficiency • The goal would be for the model building energy codes to be updated every three years to reduce building energy consumption by 30% such target to be increased to 50% incremental reductions in building energy consumption for new code editions released after January 1, 2016, with the ultimate goal being “net-zero-energy” buildings. • The starting baselines would be the 2004 IECC and ASHRAE Standard 90.1-2004.

  25. Climate Initiatives Waxman/ Markey Bill- Climate • The Draft provides for an HFC regulatory program under the Title VI of the Clean Air Act, and as expected, provides for (1) a cap and reduction schedule, (2) allocations to HFC Producers, Users and Importers (both bulk and products-containing); and several other provisions • The Draft proves for an initial cap in 2012 that is based on the average of 2004-2006 production (and 100% of HFC and HCFC production).  The number is then to be reduced by 6% in the first year, and then 3% each year until 2028.  EPA is given authority to set this baseline within the bounds of 380 and 280 MMTCO2e

  26. Total Equivalent Warming Impact (TEWI) • TEWI - Tool to estimate global warming impact of various technologies • TEWI estimates CO2 emissions of a given system over its lifetime • Direct: equivalent CO2 emissions caused by direct leakage or loss of refrigerant • Indirect: CO2 emissions due to energy consumption by the system

  27. TEWI – Major Findings • New products have half the carbon footprint than products manufactured 35 years ago • Energy efficiency is key to reducing greenhouse gas emissions from HVACR equipment

  28. Ohnishi Basis for ICCP/TEAP report

  29. ARI Standard 550/590 Chiller Certification and IPLV

  30. The Industry ARI StandardPart Load Analysis (IPLV) % Load% Hrs 100 1 75 42 50 45 25 12 Systems Solution

  31. Historic Energy Improvements http://www.unep.org/ozone/Teap-Reports/teap_chiller_report_May2004.pdf

  32. Full Load Vs. Annual Load

  33. ASHRAE Standard 147 Reducing the Release of Halogenated Refrigerants from HVAC & R Systems • Replaces Guideline 3 • Includes HFC Refrigerants New Initiatives • ARI- Responsible Use Guideline for Minimizing Fluorocarbon Emissions in Manufacturing Facilities

  34. Other Refrigerants • R-718 Water • R-717 Ammonia • R-744 CO2 • R-290,600,600a (Propane, Butane, Isobutane) • R-407c • R-410a

  35. Natural Refrigerants - Water R-718 • Refrigerant In Absorption Chillers • Safe, Abundant, Environmentally Friendly • COP = 1 (Centrifugal COP = 6.4) • Current Energy Rates Offer Poor Life Cycle Analysis In America • Common In Japan

  36. Natural Refrigerants - Ammonia R-717 • Higher Toxicity And Lower Flammability (B2) • Environmentally Friendly • Efficient • Special Safety Efforts Required (Std 15) • Guarded Plants European Built Ammonia A/C Chiller

  37. IIAR 2

  38. Refrigerants • CO2 • R-245fa • Hydrocarbons • Water

  39. Flammable Refrigerants • Propane And Butane • Major Safety Concerns • +35% Domestic Market In N. Europe • 8% Domestic World Market • Not Popular In North America

  40. Compression • Best Performance And Lowest Cost Always Starts With Compression • Refrigerant Choice Drives Compressor Design • Examples • Magnetic Bearing • High Speed Synchronous DC Motors • DC Rotary And Scroll Compressors (Japanese Technology) • Inverter Technology Synchronous brushless DC motor Magnetic Brgs

  41. AHRI CFC Chiller Task Force • Most recent estimate: 27,000 CFC chillers still in N.A. • Summit of AHRI and Efficiency Advocates- ACEEE, ASE, Utilities etc • Plan to use Stimulus moneys to replace CFC chillers • Three targets • Federal Buildings • State and Local Government Buildings • Commercial Buildings • Plan: • Gain consensus • Develop communication piece • e.g. CFC chillers at 0.9 kw/ton vs 0.56 kw/ton or 90.1- 2010 standards • Write legislative language to finance using Stimulus funds

  42. Considerations when Replacing or Retrofitting • Difficulties in Servicing and Maintaining Existing HCFC Equipment. • Declining Availability of HCFC Refrigerants. • Adequate Life-Cycle Timeframes for New Equipment using HCFC’s. • Determining the Remaining Life-Cycle of Existing Equipment. • Understanding Alternative Equipment, Refrigerant Options and Compatibility of Both Refrigerants and Equipment. • Containment is Key……………

  43. Steps we can take today • To have sustainable HVAC solutions • Need to focus on overall global impact • No one solution works for everyone • A focus on components alone • Limited by efficiency of individual components • Need to look at the performance of the system • A focus on refrigerants alone • May increase energy consumed (indirect effect) • HFC’s are a good solution today • Focus on overall impact of building • Reduce leaks in system • Increase energy efficiency through performance standards

  44. Innovative Technology Award Innovative Design Award

  45. It’s about the NEXT GENERATION……. THANK YOU………

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