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Heat Pump

A heat pump is a device that moves heat from one location (the "source") to another location (the "sink" or "heat sink"), using work. Most heat pump technology moves heat from a low-temperature heat source to a higher temperature heat sink. Common examples are food refrigerators and freezers, air conditioners, and reversible-cycle heat pumps that provide thermal comfort.

A heat pump can be thought of as a heat engine that is operating in reverse. One common type of heat pump works by exploiting the physical properties of an evaporating and condensing fluid known as a refrigerant. In heating, ventilating, and air-conditioning (HVAC) applications, a heat pump normally refers to a vapor-compression refrigeration device that includes a reversing valve and optimized heat exchangers so that the direction of heat flow may be reversed. Most commonly, heat pumps draw heat from the air or from the ground. Air-source heat pumps with a coefficient of performance (COP) 3 are developed in Japan at 20° C.

Contents

Operation

According to the second law of thermodynamics, heat cannot spontaneously flow from a colder location to a hotter area; work is required to achieve this. Heat pumps differ in how they apply this work to move heat. A heat engine allows energy to flow from a hot source to a cold heat sink, extracting a fraction of it as work in the process. Conversely, a heat pump requires work to move thermal energy from a cold source to a warmer heat sink.

Because the heat pump uses a certain amount of work to move the heat, the amount of energy deposited at the hot side is greater than the energy taken from the cold side by an amount equal to the work required. Conversely, for a heat engine, the amount of energy taken from the hot side is greater than the amount of energy deposited in the cold heat sink because some of the heat has been converted to work.

One common type of heat pump works by exploiting the physical properties of an evaporating and condensing fluid known as a refrigerant.

A simple stylized diagram of a heat pump’s vapor-compression refrigeration cycle: 1) condenser, 2) expansion valve, 3) evaporator, 4) compressor.
A simple stylized diagram of a heat pump’s vapor-compression refrigeration cycle: 1) condenser, 2)expansion valve, 3) evaporator, 4) compressor.

The working fluid, in its gaseous state, is pressurized and circulated through the system by a compressor. On the discharge side of the compressor, the now hot and highly pressurized gas is cooled in a heat exchanger, called a condenser, until it condenses into a high-pressure, moderate-temperature liquid. The condensed refrigerant then passes through a pressure-lowering device such as an expansion valve, capillary tube, or possibly a work-extracting device such as a turbine. This device then passes the low-pressure, barely liquid (saturated vapor) refrigerant to another heat exchanger, the evaporator, where the refrigerant evaporates into a gas via heat absorption. The refrigerant then returns to the compressor and the cycle is repeated.

In such a system, the refrigerant must reach a sufficiently high temperature when compressed, because the second law of thermodynamics prevents heat from flowing from a cold fluid to a hot heat sink. Similarly, the fluid must reach a sufficiently low temperature when allowed to expand, or heat cannot flow from the cold region into the fluid. In particular, the pressure difference must be great enough for the fluid to condense at the hot side and still evaporate in the lower pressure region at the cold side. The greater the temperature difference, the greater the required pressure difference; consequently, more energy is needed to compress the fluid. Thus, as with all heat pumps, the energy efficiency (amount of heat moved per unit of input work required) decreases with increasing temperature difference.

Because of the variations required in temperatures and pressures, many different refrigerants are available. Refrigerators, air conditioners, and some heating systems are common applications that use this technology.

A HVAC heat pump system
An HVAC heat pump system

In HVAC applications, a heat pump normally refers to a vapor-compression refrigeration device that includes a reversing valve and optimized heat exchangers so that the direction of heat flow may be reversed. The reversing valve switches the direction of refrigerant through the cycle; therefore, the heat pump may deliver either heating or cooling to a building. In cooler climates, the default setting of the reversing valve is heating. The default setting in warmer climates is cooling. Because the two heat exchangers, the condenser, and evaporator must swap functions, they are optimized to perform adequately in both modes. As such, the efficiency of a reversible heat pump is typically slightly less than two separately optimized machines.

In plumbing applications, a heat pump is sometimes used to heat or preheat water for swimming pools or domestic water heaters.

In somewhat rare applications, both the heat extraction and addition capabilities of a single heat pump can be useful, which typically results in very effective use of the input energy. For example, when an air-cooling need can be matched to a water-heating load, a single heat pump can serve two useful purposes. Unfortunately, these situations are rare because the demand profiles for heating and cooling are often significantly different.

Refrigerants

Until the 1990s, refrigerants were often chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) such as R-12 (dichlorodifluoromethane), one in a class of several refrigerants using the brand name Freon (a trademark of DuPont). Its manufacture was discontinued in 1995 because of the damage that CFCs cause to the ozone layer if released into the atmosphere. One widely adopted replacement refrigerant is the hydrofluorocarbon (HFC) known as R-134a (1,1,1,2-tetrafluoroethane). R-134a is not as efficient as the R-12 it replaced (in automotive applications); therefore, more energy is required to operate systems using R-134a than those using R-12. Other substances such as liquid ammonia, or occasionally the less corrosive but flammable propane or butane, can also be used.

Since 2001, carbon dioxide, R-744, has increasingly been used, utilizing the transcritical cycle. In residential and commercial applications, the hydrochlorofluorocarbon (HCFC) R-22 is still widely used. HFC, or  R-410a, does not deplete the ozone layer. It is, however, a powerful global warming gas, and is nevertheless increasingly being used. Hydrogen, helium, nitrogen, or plain air is used in the Stirling cycle, providing the maximum number of options in environmentally friendly gases.

Efficiency

When comparing the performance of heat pumps, it is best to avoid the word "efficiency," which has a very specific thermodynamic definition. The term coefficient of performance (COP) is used to describe the ratio of useful heat movement to work input. Most vapor-compression heat pumps use electrically powered motors for their work input. However, in most vehicle applications shaft work, via their internal combustion engines, provide the needed work.

When used for heating a building on a mild day, a typical air-source heat pump has a COP of 3-4, whereas a typical electric resistance heater has a COP of 1.0. That is, one joule of electrical energy will cause a resistance heater to produce one joule of useful heat. Under ideal conditions, one joule of electrical energy can cause a heat pump to move much more than one joule of heat from a cooler place to a warmer place. Sometimes, this is inappropriately expressed as an efficiency value greater than 100%, as in the statement, "XYZ brand heat pumps operate at up to 400% efficiency!" This is inaccurate, because the work does not make heat, but instead moves existing heat "upstream"; otherwise, this would be a perpetual-motion machine. The effective heating per watt of electric energy used can be up to 450% as much as resistance heating, however, making this more an issue of semantics than science.

When there is a wide temperature differential (e.g., when an air-source heat pump is used to heat a house on a very cold winter day), it takes more work to move the same amount of heat indoors than on a mild day. Ultimately, due to Carnot efficiency limits, the heat pump’s performance will approach 1.0 as the outdoor-to-indoor temperature difference increases. This typically occurs around âˆ18 °C (0 °F) outdoor temperature for air source heat pumps. Also, as the heat pump takes heat out of the air, some moisture in the outdoor air may condense and possibly freeze on the outdoor heat exchanger. The system must periodically melt this ice. In other words, when it is extremely cold outside, it is simpler, and wears the machine less, to heat using an electric-resistance heater than to strain an air-source heat pump. (Geothermal heat pumps depend on the temperature underground, which is "mild" all year round. Their COP is therefore always in the range of 3.5-4.0.

In cooling mode, a heat pump’s operating performance is described as its energy efficiency ratio (EER) or seasonal energy efficiency ratio (SEER), and both measures have units of BTU/(h·W). A larger EER number indicates better performance. The manufacturer’s literature should provide both a COP to describe performance in heating mode and an EER or SEER to describe performance in cooling mode. Actual performance varies, however, and depends on many factors such as installation, temperature differences, site elevation, and maintenance.

Heat pumps are more effective for heating than for cooling if the temperature difference is held equal. This is because the compressor’s input energy is largely converted to useful heat when in heating mode, and is discharged along with the moved heat via the condenser. But for cooling, the condenser is normally outdoors, and the compressor’s dissipated work is rejected rather than put to a useful purpose.

For the same reason, opening a food refrigerator or freezer heats up the kitchen rather than cooling it because its refrigeration cycle rejects heat to the indoor air. This heat includes the compressor’s dissipated work as well as the heat removed from the inside of the appliance.

COP and Lift

The COP increases as the temperature difference, or "lift", decreases between heat source and destination. The COP can be maximized at design time by choosing a heating system requiring only a low final water temperature (e.g., under-floor heating), and by chosing a heat source with a high average temperature (e.g., the ground). Domestic hot water (DHW) devices and radiators require high water temperatures, which in turn affects the choice of heat pump technology.

Pump Type and Source Typical Use Case CoP Variation with Output Temperature
35°C
(e.g., heated screed floor)
45°C
(e.g., heated screed floor)
55°C
(e.g., heated timber floor)
65°C
(e.g., radiator or DHW)
75°C
(e.g., radiator & amp; DHW)
85°C
(e.g., radiator & amp; DHW)
High-efficiency ASHP air at -20°C   2.2 2.0 - - - -
Two-stage ASHP air at -20°C Low source temp. 2.4 2.2 1.9 - - -
High-efficiency ASHP air at 0°C Low output temp. 3.8 2.8 2.2 2.0 - -
Prototype Transcritical CO2 (R744) Heat Pump with Tripartite Gas Cooler, source at 0°C High output temp. 3.3 - - 4.2 - 3.0
GSHP water at 0°C   5.0 3.7 2.9 2.4 - -
GSHP ground at 10°C Low output temp. 7.2 5.0 3.7 2.9 2.4 -
Theoretical Carnot cycle limit, source -20°C   5.6 4.9 4.4 4.0 3.7 3.4
Theoretical Carnot cycle limit, source 0°C   8.8 7.1 6.0 5.2 4.6 4.2
Theoretical Lorentz Cycle limit (CO2 pump), return fluid 25°C, source 0°C   10.1 8.8 7.9 7.1 6.5 6.1
Theoretical Carnot cycle limit, source 10°C   12.3 9.1 7.3 6.1 5.4 4.8

Heat Sources

Most commonly, heat pumps draw heat from the air (outside or inside air) or from the ground (groundwater or soil). The heat drawn from the ground is in most cases stored solar heat, and it should not be confused with geothermal heat, though the latter will contribute in some small measure to all heat in the ground. Other heat sources include water; nearby streams and other natural water bodies have been used, and sometimes domestic waste water which is often warmer than the ambient temperature.

Types of Heat Pumps

Many heat sources have been used to heat private and communal buildings  The two main types of heat pumps are compression and absorption. Compression heat pumps always operate on mechanical energy (through electricity), whereas absorption heat pumps may also run on heat as an energy source (through electricity or burnable fuels).

Air-source heat pumps

Air-source heat pumps are relatively easy (and inexpensive) to install and have therefore historically been the most widely used type of heat pump. However, they suffer limitations resulting from their use of outside air as a heat source or sink. The higher temperature differential during periods of extreme cold or heat leads to a lower efficiency, as explained above. In mild weather, COP may be around 3.5, whereas at temperatures below around âˆ5°C (23°F), an air-source heat pump’s COP will drop below 2. Air-source heat pumps with a COP 3 are developed in Japan at âˆ20 °C, however. The average COP over seasonal variation is typically 2.5-2.8, and for a high-efficiency model in Japan, more than 6.0 (2.8 kW). A domestic air-source heat pump water heater called Eco-cute was developed in 2001.

Geothermal heat pumps

Geothermal heat pumps typically have higher efficiencies than air-source heat pumps. This is because they draw heat from the ground or groundwater, which is at a relatively constant temperature all year round below a depth of about eight feet (2.5 m). This means that the temperature differential is lower, leading to higher efficiency. Ground-source heat pumps typically have COPs of 3.5-4.0, with little seasonal variation. The trade-off for this improved performance is that a ground-source heat pump is more expensive to install because of the need to dig wells or trenches in which to place the pipes that carry the heat exchange fluid. Groundwater heat pumps are generally more efficient than heat pumps using heat from the soil.

Solid-state heat pumps

In 1881, the German physicist Emil Warburg put a block of iron into a strong magnetic field and found that it increased very slightly in temperature. Some commercial ventures that have tried to implement this technology have claimed cuts in energy consumption of 40% compared to current domestic refrigerators. The process works as follows. Powdered gadolinium is moved into a magnetic field, heating the material by 2 to 5 Â°C. The heat is removed by a circulating fluid. The material is then moved out of the magnetic field, which reduces its temperature below its starting temperature.

Heat Transfer

After the heat has been absorbed from the source (air or ground), it is transferred and used in the home or building for space heating. This is generally done by pipes in the floor, wall, or ceiling. The heat pump can also be used to heat water (in solar hot water systems), yet this is generally not done as it is much less efficient. Finally, the heat pumps may also be used to cool the house (e.g., in summer). However, the latter is also less efficient, and therefore less commonly practiced.

History

Milestones:

  • 1834 - Jacob Perkins built a refrigerator with diethyl ether
  • 1852 - Lord Kelvin built the first heat pump

External Links

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Heat pump."

 
 
 
 
 


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