Title: The Cost of Using 1970
1- The Cost of Using 1970s Era
- Design Concepts and FEARin
- Chilled Water Systems
Presented By Hemant Mehta, P.E.
WMGroup Engineers, P.C.
2What is the FEAR
- No change in design as previous design had no
complains from client - No complain because no bench mark exists
- Fear to take the first step to change the
concepts to use state of the art technology - Consultants sell time. Fear is any new concept
will take lots of time and it is not worth the
effort
3What are1970s EraDesign Concepts?
- System Design for Peak load only
- Primary/Secondary/Tertiary Pumping
- 5C (42F) supply temperature
- System Balancing
- Circuit Setters
- Band Aid solution for any Problem
- Projected Demand way above reality
- Oversized chiller, pumps TDH and everything else
to cover behind
4State of the Art Plant concepts
- Plant designed for optimum operation for the
year. Peak hours are less than 200 hours a year - Variable flow primary pumping system
- 3.3C (38F) or lower supply temperature
- No System Balancing. Balancing is for a static
system. - No Delta P valves No Circuit Setters
- No Band Aid solution for any Problem
- Use chilled water system diversity (0.63) to
Project Cooling Demand - The total Chilled water pumping TDH even for a
very large system should not be more 63
meters(than 200 feet)
5Selecting Equipment to Optimize Efficiency
- Chiller equipment is often erroneously selected
based on peak load efficiency. - Peak load only occurs for a small number of hours
of the year, as shown on the load duration curve
below
6The Design of the Human Body
Lungs(Chillers)
Brain (Building End-Users)
Heart (Variable Volume Primary Pump)
7Basic 1970s Era Chiller Plant Design
Decoupler Line
Building Loads
Chiller
Primary Pump
Secondary Pump
8Current Design Used on Many Large District
Chilled Water Systems
Chiller
Energy Transfer Station
Decoupler Line
Building Loads
Primary Pump
Secondary Pump
Building Pump
9Modern Variable Volume Primary Chiller Plant
Design
Building Loads
Chiller
Variable Speed Primary Pump
10Lost Chiller Capacity Due to Poor ?T
Ideal Design Conditions
150 L/sec (2,400 gpm)
150 L/sec (2,400 gpm)
13C (55.5F)
13C (55.5F)
No Flow Through Decoupler
5C (41F)
5C (41F)
150 L/sec (2,400 gpm)
150 L/sec (2,400 gpm)
Chiller sees a ?T of 8C (14.5F) at a flow of
150 L/sec (2,400 gpm) The chiller capacity is
therefore 5,000 kW (1,450 tons)
11Lost Chiller Capacity Due to Poor ?T
Case 1 Mixing Through Decoupler Line
75 L/sec (1,200 gpm)
150 L/sec (2,400 gpm)
9C (48.25F)
13C (55.5F)
75 L/sec (1,200 gpm) at 5C (41F)
5C (41F)
5C (41F)
75 L/sec (1,200 gpm)
150 L/sec (2,400 gpm)
Chiller sees a ?T of 4C (7.25F) at a flow of
150 L/sec (2,400 gpm) The chiller capacity is
therefore 2,500 kW (725 tons)
12Lost Chiller Capacity Due to Poor ?T
Case 2 Poor Building Return Temperature
150 L/sec (2,400 gpm)
150 L/sec (2,400 gpm)
9C (48.25F)
9C (48.25F)
No Flow Through Decoupler
5C (41F)
5C (41F)
150 L/sec (2,400 gpm)
150 L/sec (2,400 gpm)
Chiller sees a ?T of 4C (7.25F) at a flow of
150 L/sec (2,400 gpm) The chiller capacity is
therefore 2,500 kW (725 tons)
13Small Loss in ?T Rapidly ReducesChiller Capacity
Assuming a design ?T of 8C (14.4F)
System ?T Chiller Capacity
8.0C (14.4F) 100
7.5C (13.5F) 94
7.0C (12.6F) 88
6.5C (11.7F) 81
6.0C (10.8F) 75
5.5C (9.9F) 69
5.0C (9.0F) 63
4.5C (8.1F) 56
4.0C (7.2F) 50
14Technical Paper by Erwin Hanson(Pioneer in
Chilled Water System Design)
8C
9C
11C
15Billing Algorithm for Buildings to Give Incentive
to Owners to Improve ?T
- Adjusted Demand Cost
- Adjusted Consumption Cost
- Total Cost Demand Consumption
Total Site Demand Cost X Bldg ton-hrs Total ton-hrs X Cost Penalty Factor
Total Site Electric Cost - Total Adjusted Bldg Demand Cost X Bldg ton-hrs Total ton-hrs
16The Design of the Human Body
Lungs(Chillers)
Brain (Building End-Users)
Heart (Variable Volume Primary Pump)
17History of Variable Primary Flow Projects
- King Saud University - Riyadh (1977)
- Louisville Medical Center (1984)
- Yale University(1988)
- Harvard University (1990)
- MIT(1993)
- Amgen (2001)
- New York-Presbyterian Hospital (2002)
- Pennsylvania State Capitol Complex (2005)
- Duke University (2006)
- NYU Medical Center (2007)
- Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (2007)
18King Saud University Riyadh (1977)
- 60,000 ton capacity with 30,000 tons for first
phase - Six 5,000 ton Carrier DA chillers
- Seven 10,000 GPM 240 TDH constant speed pumps
- Major Problem Too much head on chilled water
pumps - Lesson Learned Be realistic in predicting growth
19Louisville Medical Center (1984)
- Existing system (1984)
- Primary/Secondary/Tertiary with 13,000 ton
capacity - Current System (2007)
- 120 feet TDH constant speed primary pumps with
building booster pumps 30,000 ton capacity - Changed the heads on some of the evaporator
shells to change number of passes - Primary pumps are turned OFF during winter, Early
Spring and Late Fall. Building booster pumps are
operated to maintain flow.
20Yale University (1988)
- Existing system (1988)
- Primary/Secondary/Tertiary with 10,500 ton
capacity - Current System (2007)
- 180 feet TDH VFD / Steam Turbine driven variable
flow primary pumps 25,000 ton capacity - Changed the heads on some of the evaporator
shells to change number of passes
21Amgen (2001)
- Creation of a computerized hydraulic model of the
existing chilled water plant and distribution
system - Identification of bottlenecks in system flow
- Evaluation of existing capacity for present and
future loads - Two plants interconnected Single plant operation
for most of the year, second plant used for
peaking - Annual Energy Cost Savings 500,000
22Additional Variable Primary Flow Projects
- Harvard University (1990)
- MIT(1993)
- New York-Presbyterian Hospital (2002)
- Pennsylvania State Capitol Complex (2005)
- Duke University (2006)
- NYU Medical Center (2007)
- Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (2007)
23Duke University Background
- CCWP-1 plant was built four years ago
- CCWP-2 design was 90 complete (Primary/Secondary
pumping) - We were retained by Duke to peer review the
design - Peer review was time sensitive
- Plant design for CCWP-2 was modified to Variable
Primary pumping based on our recommendations
24Duke CCWP-1 Before
25Duke CCWP-1 After
- Dark blue pipe replaces old primary pumps
26Duke CIEMAS Building CHW System
90 closed
Triple duty valves 50 closed
27Duke CIEMAS Building AHU-9
Balancing valve 50 closed
28NYU Medical Center (2007)
- Plant survey and hydraulic model indicated
unnecessary pumps - 1,300 horsepower of pumps are being removed,
including 11 pumps in two brand new chiller
plants - 300,000 implementation cost
- 460,000 annual energy savings
29NYU Medical Center (2007)
- Plant survey and hydraulic model indicated
unnecessary pumps - 1,300 horsepower of pumps are being removed,
including 11 pumps in two brand new chiller
plants - 300,000 implementation cost
- 460,000 annual energy savings
8 Pumps Removed
3 Pumps Removed
7 Pumps Removed
3 Pumps Removed
30Memorial Sloan-Kettering - Before
31Memorial Sloan-Kettering - After
Bypass or removal of pump
Bypass or removal of pumps
32Pump Cemetery
To date we have removed several hundred large
pumps from our clients chilled water systems
33Plant Capacity Analysis -Detailed System Analysis
is a Necessity
- Modern computer software allows more complex
modeling of system loads, which has proven to be
very valuable to optimize performance and
minimize cost. - Return on investment to the client for detailed
analysis is typically very high.
34New York Presbyterian Hospital
- Applied revolutionary control logic
Log Data
35Bristol-Myers Squibb
- Biochemistry research building
- 140,000 square feet
- AHU-1 (applied new control logic)
- 100,000CFM
- AHU-2 (existing control logic remained)
- 100,000 CFM
36Bristol-Myers Squibb
- Applied revolutionary control logic
37PA State Capitol Complex CHW ?T
38South Nassau Hospital CHW ?T
39Good Engineers Always Ask Why?
- Why does the industry keep installing
Primary/Secondary systems? - Why dont we get the desired system ?T?
- Why does the industry allow mixing of supply and
return water?
40Good Engineers Always Ask Why?
- Why does the industry keep installing
Primary/Secondary systems? - Why dont we get the desired system ?T?
- Why does the industry allow mixing of supply and
return water? - Answer To keep consultants like us busy!
- Why change?
41Reasons to Change
- The technology has changed
- Chiller manufacturing industry supports the
concepts of Variable Primary Flow - Evaporator flow can vary over a large range
- Precise controls provides high Delta T
42Change is Starting Around the World
- Most of the large district cooling plants in
Dubai currently use Primary/Secondary pumping - By educating the client we were able to convince
them that this is not necessary - We are now currently designing three 40,000 ton
chiller plants in Abu Dhabi using Variable
Primary Flow as part of a 6.9 billion
development project
43Summary
- There are many chilled water plants with
significant opportunities for improvement - WM Group has a proven record of providing smart
solutions that work - We will be happy to review your plant logs with
no obligation
44- Thank You
- Hemant Mehta, P.E.
- President
- WMGroup Engineers, P.C.
- (646) 827-6400
- hmehta_at_wmgroupeng.com
45The New Royal Project Central Energy Plant
Study By
September 16, 2008
46Project Objective
- Determine the Optimum Central Energy Plant
Configuration and Cogeneration Feasibility
47The New Royal Project
- A new tertiary hospital for the region
- 95,000 m2 initial area (basis of analysis)
- Disaster Recovery Consideration
- N1
- Onsite Power Generation (/- 70 of peak demand)
- Two separate central plants
48Project Site
49Typical Utility Tunnel
50Study Approach
- Developing load profiles for Heating, Cooling and
Power - Developing and screening of Options
- Creating a computer model for energy cost
estimate - Performing Lifecycle Cost Analysis
- Performing Sensitivity Analysis
- Conclusions
51Load Profiles
- Cooling/Heating Daily peaks provided by Bassett
- Cooling 7,400 kWt (2,100 RT)
- Heating 8,000 kWt
- Power Daily peaks provided by Bassett
- Peak demand 4,500 kWe
- Min. demand 1,400 kWe
52Cooling Loads
53Daily Cooling Load Profile
543-D Cooling Load Profile
55Cooling Load Duration Curve
607 Equivalent Full-Load Hours
56Heating Loads
57Daily Heating Load Profile
583-D Heating Load Profile
59Heating Load Duration Curve
1,742 Equivalent Full-Load Hours
60Electric Loads
61Daily Electrical Load Profile
623-D Electrical Load Profile
63Utility Rates
- Natural Gas 9.00 / GJ
- Electricity (taken from hospital bill)
- Demand Charge 0.265641 per kVA per day
- Based on contracted annual demand
- About 10.00 per kW per month
- Energy Charge
- 0.14618 / kWh (on-peak, 7 am to 10 pm)
- 0.05322 / kWh (off-peak, 10 pm to 7 am and
weekends) - Fixed Charges 27.7155 per day
- About 830 per month
64Base Option Considerations
- Minimum first cost
- Two locations
- Conventional equipment
- Electric chillers
- Gas-fired boilers
- Diesel emergency generators
- No cogeneration or thermal storage
- Operational efficiency and reliability
65Central Energy Plant Base Option
Plant Component East CEP West CEP
Chiller Plant (2) 2,500 kWt electric motor driven, water-cooled chillers (2) 2,500 kWt electric motor driven, water-cooled chillers
Boiler Plant (2) 2,750 kWt fire tube boilers producing hot water (2) 2,750 kWt fire tube boilers producing hot water
Thermal Storage None None
Power Generation (1) 2,000 kVA diesel generator (emergency power) (1) 2,000 kVA diesel generator (emergency power)
66Alternative Plant Considerations
- Non-Electric Chillers
- Absorption Chillers (with or without heaters)
- Steam Turbine Driven Chillers
- Gas Engine Driven Chillers
- Thermal Storage
- Ice Storage
- Chilled Water Storage
- Cogeneration
- Geothermal
67Electric vs. Non-Electric Chillers
Sample taken from another project
68Hybrid Plant Option 1A
Plant Component East CEP West CEP
Chiller Plant (1) 2,650 kWt electric motor driven, water-cooled chiller (1) 2,450 kWt direct-fired absorption chiller/heater (1) 2,650 kWt electric motor driven, water-cooled chiller (1) 2,450 kWt direct-fired absorption chiller/heater
Boiler Plant (2) 1,750 kWt fire tube boilers producing hot water (1) 1,500 kWt direct-fired absorption chiller/heater (same unit as above) (2) 1,750 kWt fire tube boilers producing hot water (1) 1,500 kWt direct-fired absorption chiller/heater (same unit as above)
Thermal Storage None None
Power Generation (1) 2,000 kVA diesel generator (emergency power) (1) 2,000 kVA diesel generator (emergency power)
69Ice Storage vs. Chilled Water Storage
- Advantages of ice storage
- Ice storage requires less space
- Suitable for low temperature operation
- Disadvantages of ice storage
- Ice generation requires more energy
- Ice storage system has a higher first cost
- Ice storage is not considered for this project
70Thermal Storage Option 2
Plant Component East CEP West CEP
Chiller Plant (2) 1,750 kWt electric motor driven, water-cooled chillers (2) 1,750 kWt electric motor driven, water-cooled chillers
Boiler Plant (2) 2,750 kWt fire tube boilers producing hot water (2) 2,750 kWt fire tube boilers producing hot water
Thermal Storage (1) 30,000 kWt-hr chilled water storage tank connected to site chilled water distribution system (1) 30,000 kWt-hr chilled water storage tank connected to site chilled water distribution system
Power Generation (1) 2,000 kVA diesel generator (emergency power) (1) 2,000 kVA diesel generator (emergency power)
71Cogeneration Alternatives
System Application Assessment
Reciprocating Engines Suitable for high electric but low thermal loads such as NRP.
Fuel Cells Emerging technology not for commercial use.
Microturbines Limited capacity of units and requires skilled labor.
High Pressure Steam Boiler and Back Pressure Turbine No steam required by NRP.
High Pressure Steam Boiler and Condensing Turbine No steam required by NRP.
Gas Turbine with HRSG Typically for larger installations, requires skilled operators, and possible emissions treatment issues.
Combined Cycle Generation Typically for larger installations, requires skilled operators, and possible emissions treatment issues.
72Engine Generator Topping Cycle
73Option 3 Cogen w/ Gas Engines
Plant Component East CEP West CEP
Chiller Plant (2) 1,750 kWt electric motor driven, water-cooled chillers (1) 1,140 kWt hot water-fired absorption chiller (2) 1,750 kWt electric motor driven, water-cooled chillers (1) 1,140 kWt hot water-fired absorption chiller
Boiler Plant (2) 1,750 kWt fire tube boilers producing hot water (2) 1,750 kWt fire tube boilers producing hot water
Thermal Storage None None
Power Generation (1) 2,000 kVA natural gas generator (cogeneration) (1) 2,000 kVA diesel generator (emergency power) (1) 2,000 kVA natural gas generator (cogeneration) (1) 2,000 kVA diesel generator (emergency power)
Diesel generators not required if onsite LNG
storage is provided
74Option 4 Cogen Thermal Storage
Plant Component East CEP West CEP
Chiller Plant (2) 1,750 kWt electric motor driven, water-cooled chillers (1) 1,140 kWt hot water-fired absorption chiller (2) 1,750 kWt electric motor driven, water-cooled chillers (1) 1,140 kWt hot water-fired absorption chiller
Boiler Plant (2) 1,750 kWt fire tube boilers producing hot water (2) 1,750 kWt fire tube boilers producing hot water
Thermal Storage (1) 10,000 kWt-hr chilled water storage tank connected to site chilled water distribution system (1) 10,000 kWt-hr chilled water storage tank connected to site chilled water distribution system
Power Generation (1) 2,000 kVA natural gas generator (cogeneration) (1) 2,000 kVA diesel generator (emergency power) (1) 2,000 kVA natural gas generator (cogeneration) (1) 2,000 kVA diesel generator (emergency power)
Diesel generators not required if onsite LNG
storage is provided
75Summary of Options
Option Chiller Plant Boiler Plant Thermal Storage Power Generation
1 (4) 2,500 kWt electric (4) 2,750 kWt boilers None (2) 2,000 kVA diesel backup generators
1A (2) 2,650 kWt electric, (2) 2,450 kWt absorbers (4) 1,750 kWt boilers, (2) 1,500 kWt absorbers None (2) 2,000 kVA diesel backup generators
2 (4) 1,750 kWt electric (4) 2,750 kWt boilers (1) 30,000 kWt-hr chilled water storage (2) 2,000 kVA diesel backup generators
3 (4) 1,750 kWt electric, (2) 1,140 kWt absorbers (4) 1,750 kWt boilers None (2) 2,000 kVA natural gas cogen units, (2) 2,000 kVA diesel backup generators
4 (4) 1,750 kWt electric, (2) 1,140 kWt absorbers (4) 1,750 kWt boilers (1) 10,000 kWt-hr chilled water storage (2) 2,000 kVA natural gas cogen units, (2) 2,000 kVA diesel backup generators
76Energy Model
- Simulation of plant operation
- Calculation of total energy use (power and fuel)
and cost
77Hourly Computer Model
78Detailed Equipment Data
79Monthly Energy Cost Summary
80Monthly Energy Cost Graphs
81Comparison of Annual Energy Costs
4.3 M
4.3 M
4.2 M
3.0 M
3.0 M
82Thermal Storage Economics
- Installed Cost (Opt. 1A) 1,700,000
- Annual Energy Savings 98,000
- Simple Payback 17 years
- Low cooling load reduces benefits of thermal
storage
8325-Year Lifecycle Cost Analysis
- Capital Cost
- Energy Cost (gas and electric)
- Maintenance and Consumables Cost
- Staffing Cost
- Economic Rates
- Discount Rate
84Construction Cost Estimates
85Project Cost Factors
- Based on typical healthcare development projects
- Preliminaries and Margin 23
- Project Contingency 15
- Cost Escalation to Start Date 15
- Consultant Fees 10
- Total multiplier is approximately 1.8
86Comparison of Initial Costs
87Maintenance and Staffing Costs
Option Annual Maintenance Cost Annual Staffing Cost
1 84,000 130,000
1A 90,000 130,000
2 86,000 130,000
3 105,000 195,000
4 107,000 195,000
- Options 3 and 4 also require a 240,000 engine
overhaul every 5 years (included in analysis) - Staffing cost based on 65,000 per year for each
full-time staff employee
88Economic Parameters
- Based on estimated government rates
- Discount Rate 8.00
- Gas Cost Escalation Rate 4.30
- Electric Cost Escalation Rate 3.40
- Maintenance Escalation Rate 4.00
- Consumables Escalation Rate 4.00
8925-Year Lifecycle Cost Analysis
90Cost Summary
Option First Cost Annual Energy Cost 25-Year Present Worth Cost
1 20,839,000 4,345,000 87,223,000
1A 22,879,000 4,311,000 88,825,000
2 23,558,000 4,243,000 88,473,000
3 32,176,000 2,988,000 83,303,000
4 33,704,000 2,978,000 84,722,000
91Results of Lifecycle Cost Analysis
92Sensitivity Analysis
- Varying electric demand charge
- Varying gas cost
- Change economic parameters
- Carbon emission tax
- Use of geothermal energy
93- Thank You
- Hemant Mehta, P.E.
- President
- WMGroup Engineers, P.C.
- (646) 827-6400
- hmehta_at_wmgroupeng.com