Here's an update:
Setting the Fluid type of the Collector Loop to Ethylene Glycol 35 Percent reduced the number of warnings to 373222.
In addition to that, disabling all previously set availability managers and leaving the system to be always on, further reduced the warnings to 153779.
I have attached the .idf file if anyone is interested.
And this is the weather file which is used:
http://apps1.eere.energy.gov/buildings/energyplus/weatherdata/6_europe_wmo_region_6/BGR_Sofia.156140_IWEC.zip
PS: I think that there is a possible bug in the IDF Editor v1.42d.
When I tried to set the User Defined fluid type for the PlantLoop, the object's name /EG035/ was not introduced in the list of possible choices, so I had to manually enter the name. But then this "something's wrong" reddish background color appeared. Anyway, the simulation run smoothly.
On 26.06.2012 23:19, Miroslav Bratanov wrote:
I tried to set ethylene glycol to the collector loop before but I received some other errors and then I decided that it is incompatible with the SolarCollector:FlatPlate:Water object. I can't recall the exact error message now. I'll give it another shot and will share the results after.
Miroslav
On 26.06.2012 23:05, Griffith, Brent wrote:
For solar collectors, those cold temperatures usually come from calculations of panel stagnation temperature at night. These calculations are when the collector is, or might be, ?off? and are important for freeze protection controls. Usually the loop starts to flow and the collector is not stagnate in the final result. It is better to ignore those warnings because to get rid of them you would need to run the fluid all the night long.
EnergyPlus can model ethylene glycol as the loop fluid, see the input fields called Fluid Type and User Defined Fluid Type in the PlantLoop object.
From: EnergyPlus_Support@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [ mailto:EnergyPlus_Support@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Miroslav Bratanov
Sent: Tuesday, June 26, 2012 1:56 PM
To: EnergyPlus_Support@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [EnergyPlus_Support] Re: GetSpecificHeatGlycol: Temperature is out of range
I get the same warnings too. They show even with the example file SolarCollectorFlatPlateWater.idf. I assume that it is because the fluid in the collector loop is water. That's why the warnings occur when the temperatures are either negative or too high (more than 100 degrees).
I am also curious if this affects the final results. The system that I model will use ethylene glycol as a heat transfer fluid for the collector loop but there is no such option in EnergyPlus.
Has anyone submitted such model for LEED? I wonder how to explain these warnings because in my model there are 581218 of them.
Thank you!
Miroslav
On 3.06.2012 12:43, FrancescoP wrote: