Title: HeatingCooling Systems, Wind
1ECE 333 (398RES)Renewable Energy Systems
- Lecture 17
- Heating/Cooling Systems, Wind
- Professor Tom Overbye
- Department of Electrical andComputer Engineering
2Announcements
- Read Chapter 6
- Homework 7 is due now.
- Homework 8 is 5.14, 5.15, 5.16, 6.1, 6.2
- Wind farm field trip April 7 or 9 (still working
on finalizing the date) to Grand Ridge Wind
Energy Center in Ransom, IL -
3Cooling, Heating, and Cogeneration
- P/H (power-to-heat) ratio of buildings varies
greatly, and we want to smooth it out - Heat Pumps - Use electricity instead of heat in
the winter - Absorption Cooling - Use heat instead of
electricity in the summer - Cooling is a large part of the load, so it is
important to consider
4Vapor-Compression Refrigeration
- Challenge - absorb heat from cool environment and
reject it to a warm environment - Take advantage of the fact that highly compressed
fluids will get colder when they expand
Low pressure vapor
High pressure vapor
50F
50F
95F
120F
Evaporator Coil
Condenser Coil
Compressor
100F
38F
45F
Expansion Valve
85F
Low pressure vapor/liquid
High pressure liquid
Figure 5. 12
5Vapor-Compression Refrigeration
- Compressor refrigerant enters as low pressure,
exits high - Condenser cools and condenses from gas to
liquid - Expansion Valve pressure decreases
- Evaporator
Low pressure vapor
High pressure vapor
50F
50F
95F
120F
Evaporator Coil
Condenser Coil
Compressor
100F
38F
45F
Expansion Valve
85F
Low pressure vapor/liquid
High pressure liquid
Figure 5. 12
6Refrigeration Cycle Coefficient of Performance
(COPR)
- A measure of refrigeration cycle efficiency
- QL heat extracted from refrigerated space
- W work put into compressor
- Dimensionless - QL and W must have the same units
- Tells how many units of heat are removed for each
unit of energy consumed by the A/C - Want this to be high- if it is low, you need more
electrical input to provide the desired heat
output
7Energy Efficiency Rating (EER)
- Another way to express refrigeration cycle
efficiency - Typical EER for A/Cs is 9 to 17 Btu/W-hr (at 95?
F) - Related to COPR by
- Seasonal Energy Efficiency (SEER) an average
rating over the course of the heating season.
Above 13 is one requirement
8One ton of cooling
- The rate heat is absorbed when a 1 ton block of
ice melts - Another efficiency measure tons/kW of cooling
- A 3-ton home-sized A/C uses approximately 2-3kW
- Chillers can make ice at night to melt during the
day
9Heat Pumps
- Move heat from a source to sink
- Have the ability to be reversed provide heating
and cooling
Figure 5. 15
10Heat Pumps
- Heat pumps, when used as a heater, deliver QL
(heat removed from cold environment)W
(compressor energy) QH - Relationship between COPHP and COPR
- The vapor-compression refrigeration device shown
earlier is a heat pump
11Ground Source Heat Pumps
- Key idea ground temperature below surface is
relatively constant - Good for use in climates with cold winters and
hot summers - Have very high COPs
- but are somewhat expensive
http//www.igshpa.okstate.edu/geothermal/geotherma
l.htm
12Ground Source Heat Pumps
- On US Department of Energy Website
- Also called Geothermal Heat Pump Systems
- 4 basic types horizontal, vertical, pond/lake,
and open loop - Horizontal typical for residential, needs to be
at least 4 ft deep
http//apps1.eere.energy.gov/consumer/your_home/sp
ace_heating_cooling/index.cfm/mytopic12650
13Absorption Cooling
- Heat-driven alternatives (instead of
electricity-driven) for cooling - Helps smooth the demand for thermal energy
throughout the year - Refrigerant is re-pressurized with heat instead
of a compressor - Current COPs are about 1.0 to 1.1
14Desiccant Dehumidification
- Another heat-driven cooling technology
- Desiccants materials - when contact is made with
water vapor, it readily condenses onto their
surfaces - Air passing through becomes much drier (latent
cooling) and slightly warmer - Must provide sensible cooling (lower the air
temperature) - Must regenerate desiccants with a hot air
stream - Good in humid climates
15Distributed Generation (DG) Benefits
- Provide small increments in generation which can
track load growth closely to reduce costs of
unused capacity - Can ease bottlenecks in distribution networks
- Improve voltages
- Improve power factor
- Reduce losses
- Provide power during outages
- Reduce emissions
- But they lose economics of scale!
16Distribution Cost Deferral
- Utilities can identify portions of the system
where distributed generation and demand side
management would be the most beneficial - Customers at those locations could be provided
with incentives to generate their own power - Distributed generation can help alleviate
bottlenecks
17Demand - Side Management (from Prof. Gross)
- Generation sources are supply-side resources
they provide both energy (kWh) and capacity (kW) - Supply-side resources also provide a variety of
services such as reactive power support and
system stability enhancement - Unfortunately, supply-side resources may have
undesirable environmental attributes
18Demand - Side Management (from Prof. Gross)
- Also called demand side resources - any program
that attempts to modify customers energy use - Conceptually, lowering the load is a source of
energy you can either raise generation or lower
load - These programs have beenaround for decades
19Demand Side Management (from Prof. Gross)
- Efficiency improvement
- Conservation programs
- Load management programs
- Fuel substitution programs
Load Shape Objectives in DSM
20Demand - Side Management (DSM)
- Part of an Integrated Resource Planning (IRP) or
a Least Cost Planning (LCP) process - Integrated means that supply and demand side
resources are given equal consideration - Necessary conditions for successful DSM programs
- Decoupling of utility sales from utility profits
(disincentive more energy sold -gt higher profit) - Recover DSM program costs
- Incentives to encourage utilities to prefer DSM
- DSM cost-effectiveness is difficult to measure
21A Simple Cost Effectiveness Test (from Prof.
Gross)
22Wind Power Systems
Photos taken near Moraine View State Park, IL
23Historical Development of Wind Power
- The first known wind turbine for producing
electricity was by Charles F. Brush turbine, in
Cleveland, Ohio in 1888
- 12 kW
- Used electricity to charge batteries in the
cellar of the owners mansion
Note the person
http//www.windpower.org/en/pictures/brush.htm
24Historical Development of Wind Power
- First wind turbine outside of the US to generate
electricity was built by Poul la Cour in 1891 in
Denmark
- Used electricity from his wind turbines to
electrolyze water to make hydrogen for the gas
lights at the schoolhouse
http//www.windpower.org/en/pictures/lacour.htm
25Historical Development of Wind Power
- In the US - first wind-electric systems built in
the late 1890s - By 1930s and 1940s, hundreds of thousands were in
use in rural areas not yet served by the grid - Interest in wind power declined as the utility
grid expanded and as reliable, inexpensive
electricity could be purchased - Oil crisis in 1970s created a renewed interest in
wind until US government stopped giving tax
credits - Renewed interest again since the 1990s
26Global Installed Wind Capacity
Global Wind Energy Council http//www.gwec.net/fil
eadmin/documents/PressReleases/PR_stats_annex_tabl
e_2nd_feb_final_final.pdf
27Annual Installed Wind Capacity
Global Wind Energy Council http//www.gwec.net/fil
eadmin/documents/PressReleases/PR_stats_annex_tabl
e_2nd_feb_final_final.pdf
28Top 10 Countries - Installed Wind Capacity (as of
the end of 2008)
Global Wind Energy Council http//www.gwec.net/fil
eadmin/documents/PressReleases/PR_stats_annex_tabl
e_2nd_feb_final_final.pdf
29Historical Development of Wind Power
- Leading states in installed capacity (US) as
of 12/31/2007 - 1 Texas
- 4.356 MW
- 2 California
- 2,439 MW
- 3 Minnesota
- 1,299 MW
- 4 Iowa
- 1,273 MW
- 5 Washington
- 1,163 MW
http//www.awea.org/newsroom/
http//www.windpower.org/en/pictures/lacour.htm
30Types of Wind Turbines
- Windmill- used to grind grain into flour
- Many different names - wind-driven generator,
wind generator, wind turbine, wind-turbine
generator (WTG), wind energy conversion system
(WECS) - Can have be horizontal axis wind turbines (HAWT)
or vertical axis wind turbines (VAWT) - Groups of wind turbines are located in what is
called either a wind farm or a wind park
31Vertical Axis Wind Turbines
- Darrieus rotor - the only vertical axis machine
with any commercial success - Wind hitting the vertical blades, called
aerofoils, generates lift to create rotation
- No yaw (rotation about vertical axis) control
needed to keep them facing into the wind - Heavy machinery in the nacelle is located on the
ground - Blades are closer to ground where windspeeds are
lower
http//www.reuk.co.uk/Darrieus-Wind-Turbines.htm
http//www.absoluteastronomy.com/topics/Darrieus_w
ind_turbine
32Horizontal Axis Wind Turbines
- Downwind HAWT a turbine with the blades
behind (downwind from) the tower - No yaw control needed- they naturally orient
themselves in line with the wind - Shadowing effect when a blade swings behind the
tower, the wind it encounters is briefly reduced
and the blade flexes
33Horizontal Axis Wind Turbines
- Upwind HAWT blades are in front of (upwind
of) the tower - Most modern wind turbines are this type
- Blades are upwind of the tower
- Require somewhat complex yaw control to keep them
facing into the wind - Operate more smoothly and deliver more power
34Number of Rotating Blades
- Windmills have multiple blades
- need to provide high starting torque to overcome
weight of the pumping rod - must be able to operate at low windspeeds to
provide nearly continuous water pumping - a larger area of the rotor faces the wind
- Turbines with many blades operate at much lower
rotational speeds - as the speed increases, the
turbulence caused by one blade impacts the other
blades - Most modern wind turbines have two or three
blades
35Power in the Wind
- Consider the kinetic energy of a packet of air
with mass m moving at velocity v - Divide by time and get power
- The mass flow rate is (r is air density)
36Power in the Wind
- Combining (6.2) and (6.3),
Power in the wind
PW (Watts) power in the wind ? (kg/m3) air
density (1.225kg/m3 at 15C and 1 atm) A (m2)
the cross-sectional area that wind passes
through v (m/s) windspeed normal to A (1 m/s
2.237 mph)
37Power in the Wind (for reference solar is about
600 w/m2 in summer)
- Power increases like the cube of wind speed
- Doubling the wind speed increases the power by
eight - Energy in 1 hour of 20 mph winds is the same as
energy in 8 hours of 10 mph winds - Nonlinear, so we cannot use average wind speed
Figure 6.5