[BLDG-SIM] HVAC efficiencies in DOE2
Michael Brandemuehl
michael.brandemuehl at colorado.edu
Tue Jun 20 07:46:33 PDT 2006
Andy,
You might also look at the following paper that came from ASHRAE Research
Project 1197-RP Updated Energy Calculation Models for Residential HVAC
Equipment:
Wassmer, M., and M. J. Brandemuehl. 2006. Effect of Data Availability on
Modeling of Residential Air Conditioners and Heat Pumps for Energy
Calculations. ASHRAE Transactions 111(1).
The paper includes another couple relationships of EER=f(SEER) and
COP47=f(HSPF). In our case, we used a set of 25 air conditioners and heat
pumps to develop the correlations.
Also, Jeff Hirsh and his colleagues (Marlin Addison, John Hill, Paul Reeves,
and Steve Gates) did some work for Southern California Edison a few years
ago that involved examining EER and SEER as predictors of actual seasonal
energy efficiency. As I recall, it also included comparisons of EER=f(SEER)
using a larger set of units. I don't think the work has been published, but
may be available through the authors.
And yes, you also need to remove the fan power from the power data. The
performance data reported under the various ARI standards are typically
"net" values of capacity and power - i.e., net capacity delivered by the
HVAC unit and total power consumed by the unit. Most simulation program
treat the indoor fan separately and expect input data based on "gross"
performance of the coil and the power used by everything except the indoor
fan.
Mike
___________________________________________________
Michael J. Brandemuehl, Ph.D., P.E.
Civil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering
University of Colorado
428 UCB, ECOT 441
Boulder, CO 80309-0428
303 492 8594
303 492 7317 fax
michael.brandemuehl at colorado.edu
-----Original Message-----
From: BLDG-SIM at gard.com [mailto:BLDG-SIM at gard.com] On Behalf Of Andy Lau
Sent: Tuesday, June 20, 2006 6:33 AM
To: BLDG-SIM at gard.com
Subject: [BLDG-SIM] HVAC efficiencies in DOE2
I'm working on putting together a document to guide students in defining
the heating and cooling equipment efficiencies that are input to DOE2.2,
specifically eQuest v.3.55. In the process, I've realized that I'm not
that confident on some of these issues and seek the knowledge of this
BLDG-SIM group.
First, HIR for furnaces and boilers, derived from AFUE and Et. Because
eQuest has built-in HIR=f(PLR) curves, the program accounts for
part-load effects like cycling and flue losses. Therefore, I would
expect that it is Et, thermal efficiency, that should be used to
determine HIR=1/Et. The question then is whether there is a documented
relationship for determining Et from AFUE. All I have found thus far is
the California Energy Commission's 2005 "Nonresidential Alternative
Calculation Method (ACM) Approval Manual" wherein there are
relationships for HIR for packed and split systems as well as boilers
(the relationships are in the attached spreadsheet). Not sure where
these relations have come from plus I would expect AFUE to be lower than
Et which is not always the case in these correlations.
Second, EIR for heat pumps in heating mode. My understanding is that
the eQuest input should reflect the COP at 47F outdoor temperature, not
including the supply fan energy use which is modeled separately in
eQuest. If a heat pump is rated in terms of HSPF, then this seasonal
average value must be converted to COP47. I've found an FSEC/ASHRAE
publication, "Climate Impacts on Heating Seasonal Performance Factor
(HSPF) and Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio (SEER) for Air Source Heat
Pumps," that provides a simple correlation, COP47 = 1.718*HSPF/3.413.
In this correlation, supply fan power is removed from the HSPF using the
ARI standard blower value of 0.365 W/cfm.
Third, EIR for packaged cooling equipment in cooling mode. Here the EIR
should be based on the COP at 95F outdoor, 80F indoor, which is related
to the EER, COP95 = EER/3.413. For smaller units, SEER is often the
reported measure, which accounts for seasonal variation. In the same
FSEC/ASHRAE study, they found this correlation, COP95 =
1.063*SEER/3.413. Again, fan power is backed out of the SEER values
using the ARI standard blower.
On the issue of removing supply fan power when it is included in HSPF,
SEER, or EER, there is the question of whether it should just be removed
from the electrical input, or also as a heat gain.
I would appreciate your comments on these relationships and references
to any other publications that address these issues.
Andy Lau
Associate Professor of Engineering
(814) 863-9075, andylau at psu.edu
www.cede.psu.edu/~andylau
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