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Six Month Progress Report

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Attendance at the ISES one day event in Brighton and the WREC ... back up heating provided by gas fired condensing boiler or wood stove. Suspended Timber Floor ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Six Month Progress Report


1
Six Month Progress Report
  • J R Gates

2
General Summary
  • Attendance at the ISES one day event in Brighton
    and the WREC conference in Brighton
  • Paper published in the WREC conference
    proceedings and presentation given
  • Paper accepted for the CIB conference in
    Maastricht
  • Contact has been made with, University of Dayton,
    University of Salford, South Bank University,
    University of South Australia, Netherlands Energy
    Research Foundation and Rubitherm
  • PCM web page
  • Foreign exchange students

3
Research Topics
  • PCMs
  • Solar collectors and system configurations
  • Proposed PCM system
  • Plastic selection

4
PCMs
  • Inorganic
  • Organic

5
Desired Properties
  • Low cost, non-flammable, non-toxic, chemically
    stable, high latent heat of fusion, high thermal
    conductivity, low changes in volume due during
    phase change, low vapour pressure, low
    containment cost

6
Inorganic PCMs
  • Advantages - high heat of fusion, good thermal
    conductivity, cheap and non- flammable
  • Disadvantages - Corrosive to most metals,
    supercooling, phase decomposition and suffer from
    loss of hydrate

7
Organic PCMs
  • Advantages - chemically stable, suffer little or
    no supercooling, non-corrosive, non-toxic, high
    heat of fusion and low vapour pressure
  • Disadvantages - low thermal conductivity, high
    changes in volume on phase change, flammability

8
Containerisation
  • Macroencapsulation - large storage cylinders or
    pouches
  • Microencapsulation - powders or capsules

9
Containerisation - Basic Requirements
  • Strength, flexibility, temperature resistance, UV
    stability, good thermal conductivity,
    compatibility and stability with PCM

10
Containerisation - Problems
  • Large containers make it difficult to extract
    heat as PCM becomes a self insulating material
  • Compressive strength reduced when combined with
    concrete
  • Flexible containers are damaged during thermal
    cycling due to changes in volume
  • Organic PCMs react with most plastics
  • Inorganic PCMs need airtight containers to reduce
    hydrate loss

11
Previous Research - Weaknesses
  • Lack of long term testing for both proposed
    systems and PCMs
  • Lack of experimental data on melting points and
    heat of fusion

12
Mathematical Modelling
  • Difficult to analyse the heat transfer of PCM as
    it is a moving boundary problem
  • A PCM may consist of several layers a solid
    region a liquid region and a mushy region. Some
    models ignore the mushy region

13
Solar Collectors
  • Flat plate - able to utilise both direct and
    diffuse radiation, easily maintained, easy to
    construct, but temperatures limited to
    approximately 100C
  • Evacuated tube - able to perform even during
    overcast weather, self cleaning and radiation is
    the only heat loss mechanism at work, but high in
    cost and can reflect more sunlight than flat
    plate collector

14
Solar System Selection
  • Thermo-Siphon
  • Indirect system
  • Open loop draindown system
  • Open loop drainback system

15
Thermo-siphon System
16
Indirect System
17
Open Loop Draindown System
18
Open Loop Drainback System
19
System Criteria
  • Design life of 25 years
  • All the components used should either be recycled
    or easily recyclable
  • Able to reduce energy use and CO2 emissions on an
    all year round basis
  • Able to meet a given percentage of space heating
    load in the winter and a given percentage of hot
    water demand in the summer
  • The PCM must be easy to remove from the building
    once it is decommissioned, whereupon it can
    either be recycled or disposed of without
    adversely affecting the environment

20
System Criteria Contd
  • The PCM must not pose a threat to the environment
    or the inhabitants
  • The system should require low maintenance with a
    high proportion of this being able to be
    completed by the homeowner to reduce costs in use
  • The system must be suitable for installation in
    both new build and retrofit applications
  • Back up heating must be provided by an
    alternative energy source other than grid
    produced electricity
  • Should be so far as practicable be modular to
    reduce construction costs

21
Proposed System
  • Combi-system
  • PCM filled panels
  • drainback system with a PV driven water pump
  • solar collectors
  • storage tank
  • back up heating provided by gas fired condensing
    boiler or wood stove

22
Suspended Timber Floor
23
Concrete Floor
24
Typical System Layout
25
Advantages
  • Panels can be recycled when the building is
    decommissioned
  • Panels will be marked with a resin identification
    code making recycling easier
  • System can be installed in both suspended timber
    and concrete floors
  • Long thin panels with a large surface area will
    facilitate heat storage and removal

26
Advantages Contd
  • The use of a PV powered pump will cease parasitic
    pump losses, pump speed and flow rate will be
    automatically modulated resulting in higher
    collection efficiencies and reduction in energy
    use and better protection against overheating of
    collectors in power cuts
  • High collector efficiencies should be produced
    due to low flow temperatures needed
  • Similar advantages to those offered by underfloor
    heating

27
Advantages Contd
  • Drainback system does not require electronic
    freeze protection valves, there is no anti-freeze
    levels to check reducing maintenance, no double
    walled heat exchanger is needed increasing
    efficiency, water returns back to storage tank
    when pumping stops, heat loss reduced by
    supplying heated water straight to the top of the
    storage tank which also aids thermal
    stratification
  • Capable of reducing C02 emissions and energy use
    all year round
  • Not reliant on back up heating from off peak
    electricity

28
Potential Disadvantages
  • Fire load
  • Plastic manufacture reliant on petroleum and to a
    lesser extent coal production
  • Additional dead load imposed by the system
  • Long pipe runs may result in low flow
    temperatures
  • If a wood stove is used there can be problem of
    storage and particulate pollution

29
Plastic Panels - Design Criteria
  • Good thermal conductivity
  • Thin wall section to aid heat extraction
  • Should be long and thin in shape to aid charge
    and discharge of PCM
  • Transparency (for lab model only)
  • Melting point above the highest potential flow
    rate temperature
  • Constructed from recycled material or material
    easily recycled

30
Plastic Panels Contd
  • Unaffected by PCM
  • Fire resistant or self extinguishing
  • Ability to accommodate volume change during phase
    transition of PCM
  • Joints must be able to accommodate the thermal
    movement of the plastic itself and changes in
    volume in the PCM at phase transition

31
Potential Problems
  • High thermal movement
  • Low stiffness
  • Flammability

32
Potential Solutions
  • Thermal movement - careful material selection and
    detailing
  • Flammability - PVCu burns with great difficulty
    and is self extinguishing. Polyphenylene
    sulphide is self extinguishing, but will burn if
    a flame is present, charring without dripping or
    fire spread. Can also use fire retardants or
    anti oxidants although some lead to increased
    smoke emissions.

33
Future Work
  • Please see handout
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