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DUCT EFFICIENCY AND HEAT PUMP PERFORMANCE

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DUCT EFFICIENCY AND HEAT PUMP PERFORMANCE Paul Francisco David Baylon Ecotope, Inc. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: DUCT EFFICIENCY AND HEAT PUMP PERFORMANCE


1
DUCT EFFICIENCY AND HEAT PUMP PERFORMANCE
  • Paul Francisco
  • David Baylon
  • Ecotope, Inc.

2
House Assumptions
  • House over crawl space
  • 1350 square feet
  • 3.5 ton heat pump or electric furnace
  • 10 leakage on both supply and return sides
  • House with half basement
  • Approx. 2200 square feet
  • 3.5 ton heat pump or electric furnace
  • 5 supply leakage, no return leakage

3
Equipment Assumptions
  • 3.5 ton heat pump is rated at HSPF of 8.2, SEER
    of 14
  • For heating, resistance added to meet load,
    compressor used as much as possible
  • Electric resistance furnace sized to meet load
  • Some prototypes use different heat pumps, both
    bigger and smaller

4
Effect of Ducts
  • Duct losses add to the load that must be met by
    the heat pump or furnace
  • supply leakage and conduction result in capacity
    that does not make it to the house
  • return leakage and conduction result in changed
    entering conditions at the equipment

5
Effect of Ducts
  • Ducts in buffer spaces see different ambient
    conditions than the house
  • in heating season, crawl space often warmer than
    outside but colder than house
  • in cooling season, crawl space often cooler than
    house or outdoors
  • in cooling season, attic often hotter than house
    or outdoors

6
Savings from added insulation - Portland electric
furnace
7
Duct Loss for Electric Furnace
8
Duct Loss for Cooling
9
Duct Loss for Heating(Heat Pumps)
10
Summary of Duct Effects
  • Duct insulation can account for up to about 1/3
    of duct losses at these levels of leakage
  • Return insulation has little impact
  • Ducts have little impact in prototype with half
    basement
  • Duct efficiency changes between heating and
    cooling, with cooling being higher
  • Largest impact of duct loss is for heating with
    heat pump due to greater use of resistance at
    warmer temperatures - this effect very large in
    colder climates (more than doubles energy use in
    Missoula if ducts are uninsulated)
  • Duct efficiency and percentage savings not
    heavily dependent on house vintage

11
Heat Pump Performance
  • Heating performance dependent on outdoor
    temperature.
  • Heating capacity of compressor reduces 30
    between 47oF and 30oF
  • Air delivery temperature is reduced by 10oF to
    less than 85oF resulting in severe comfort
    problems
  • Electric resistance is brought on to increase
    heating capacity and delivery air temperature
  • To control these effects the manufactures
    recommend a Low Ambient Cutout control set to
    about 30oF that transfers turns off the
    compressor and uses the elements only.

12
Seattle
13
Portland
14
Boise
15
Spokane
16
Missoula
17
Heat Pump Performance Adjustments
  • Heat pump set-up determines the overall
    performance
  • Improper charge and/or air flow results in a
    5-12 reduction in COP
  • Defrost control reduces performance by 2 for
    demand defrost and 10-12 for timed defrost
  • Crankcase heater can be similar to defrost in
    cold climates
  • QC protocol necessary to insure that proper
    installation and specification are met

18
Performance Adjustments
19
Heat Pump Cooling Performance
  • Cooling performance rating uses SEER to indicate
    cooling energy requirements
  • Actual cooling seasonal COP depends on ambient
    humidity and temperature in the climate
  • Effective average for seasonal cooling
    performance about 65 of the SEER rating
  • A SEER of 14.0 is 9.1
  • Duct performance can reduce this efficiency by
    10-30
  • Not very dependent on Northwest climate

20
Seasonal COP DuctsCooling - Spokane
21
Seasonal COP DuctsCooling - Portland
22
Duct Efficiency Impact on Heat Pump Performance
  • Duct losses can reduce heat pump performance to
    less than half of rated COP
  • Much more severe in cold climates
  • Overall performance depends on quality duct
    installation as much as quality heat pump
    installation

23
Seasonal COP DuctsHeating - Spokane
24
Seasonal COP DuctsHeating - Portland
25
Summary
  • Overall system efficiency strongly interactive
    between ducts and conditioning system
  • Significant duct losses can largely eliminate
    potential savings from heat pumps
  • Overall system efficiency requires quality
    control of both heat pump installation and duct
    installation
  • Heat pump controls crucial to overall
    performance, especially in cold climates
  • HSPF and SEER rating numbers are poor
    approximations of actual performance, even with
    ideal installation
  • Percentage improvement from lower to higher SEER
    may be appropriate
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