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Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition
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    • CommentAuthorgyrogear
    • CommentTimeAug 15th 2015
     
    Hello to one and all, New member here…

    I have searched the forum (and the Web) but cannot find any reference to using uncoiled PEX as-is.

    The reason is, I want to install heat in an under-stairs void (concrete): given the restricted dimensions, I suppose staring infrared is a No-Go, so I guess I will placing a coil of PEX in there, and circulate hot water through it, a bit like UFH.

    I would glue 30mm of XPS to the floor and two walls, leaving the stair soffit bare. I would install as much PEX as possible (whence my question…), then cover it with concrete or mudcrete, for additional thermal mass, then brick up the open side (to keep the cats out…).

    Heat circulation would be from a hot-water storage driven off a solar thermal collector built after the event.

    My questions are: would such a system work? Could the coil be left as-is, or would “easing it out” be better, to better occupy the available floor area of one square meter. More easing = less PEX, less water, presumably less heat…

    Thanks for any feedback !

    gyrogear
    • CommentAuthortony
    • CommentTimeAug 15th 2015
     
    It would be better to use an old hot water cylinder.

    Where is the heat coming from that you want to dump?
    • CommentAuthorSprocket
    • CommentTimeAug 15th 2015
     
    You would do better to use water as your heat store. It has a higher heat capacity than concrete and because it is fluid it will convect so has a lower thermal resistance meaning that you can dump heat into it more rapidly than concrete. The same is also a big advantage when trying to extract heat from it.
    • CommentAuthorgyrogear
    • CommentTimeAug 15th 2015
     
    Thanks for the quick responses !

    The proposed build *is* using water as the heat store - maybe 240 litres, which is more than I could get into the cubby...

    Otherwise, I'm not sure where I would get an old HW cylinder ? Then it might have a LEAK !
    To fit in the cubby, it would have to be less than 100 cms long, laid horizontal.
    I guess this would be about 100 liters ? I would have to strip the insulation off it...
    If I get a new one, I'm paying for an electrical heat function that I won't be using - that's why I thought of the PEX, run off a solar collector.
  1.  
    when you say heat store do you mean a standard HW cylinder you heat via ST and take water off or a heatstore you heat up but use as a permanent heat store ( usually larger than 240l with various take off points) and then get
    HW via a heat exchange.
    search vikinghouse website think he got some info on a pex/concrete heatdump they did a while back. he post on here re
    • CommentAuthorskyewright
    • CommentTimeAug 16th 2015 edited
     
    Posted By: SprocketYou would do better to use water as your heat store. It has a higher heat capacity than concrete and because it is fluid it will convect so has a lower thermal resistance meaning that you can dump heat into it more rapidly than concrete. The same is also a big advantage when trying to extract heat from it.

    Water has a much greater Specific Heat Capacity (water 4200J/K.kg, concrete 880K/K.kg), but it's a bit closer looked at as Thermal Density (water 4200000 J/K.m3, concrete 2112000), if the OP can find some magnetite bricks from old storage heater they manage 3893104 J/K.m3, so almost up there with water on a space for space comparison.

    As to rate of heat transfer, maybe the OP wants "slow release" of heat from the cubby?

    PS. Anyone interested in storing heat might be interested in where I found those Thermal Density figures. It was in a very interesting Masters Thesis
    "ELECTRICAL STORAGE HEATER IN THE CONTEXT OF STORAGE TECHNOLOGIES. Author: Ignacio Becerril Romero"
    http://www.esru.strath.ac.uk/Documents/MSc_2013/Becerril.pdf
    • CommentAuthorTriassic
    • CommentTimeAug 16th 2015 edited
     
    This web page and the reports listed at the bottom might be worth a read
    http://www.viking-house.ie/hydro-thermal-energy-store.html
    •  
      CommentAuthorcrosbie
    • CommentTimeAug 17th 2015
     
    Maybe you can lay your coil of PEX on the floor and then put a thick polythene bag* of water on top of it?

    That way, when gently filled, the bag can fill the odd shape under the stairs (given no protruding nails) and envelop the coil of PEX.

    * Water Storage Bladder?
    Pillow Tank?
    • CommentAuthorskyewright
    • CommentTimeAug 17th 2015
     
    Posted By: gyrogear
    I would glue 30mm of XPS to the floor and two walls, leaving the stair soffit bare

    I'd be inclined to go for more than 30mm on the floor unless you already have serious floor insulation.

    Posted By: gyrogear
    My questions are: would such a system work? Could the coil be left as-is, or would “easing it out” be better, to better occupy the available floor area of one square meter. More easing = less PEX, less water, presumably less heat…

    If the idea is to cast a block of concrete, e.g. a cube 1000 x 1000 x 1000 (or whatever), then to get the best heat transfer & distribution I think you'd be best to space out your coil so that, as much as possible, each bit of pipe has its own bit of concrete to be heating up, if you see what I mean. A spiral shouldn't be to hard to arrange. A 3D version of the usual UFH pattern might be better?

    N.B. None of that is based on experience, just on thinking about the material properties & how heat moves about (not that's I'm an expert on those either!). :smile:
    • CommentAuthorgyrogear
    • CommentTimeAug 17th 2015
     
    Many thanks for all the feedback, especially to Sprocket for the physics !

    This suggestion by Crosbie got me thinking, so how does this sound to you experienced folk:

    Securing (somehow…) a semi-uncoiled coil of half-inch ID PEX (L = 25 m) in an 80-liter plastic tub (dustbin) of static water. Coils oriented vertically, held in bungees.

    Alternatively, use a copper coil. In which case, 10-meter coils of 14/12 mm. (Might have to be some copper in air due to roll diameter…).

    Two such radiators, the coils interconnected in air, by a union.

    As much floor & wall XPS as possible in the cubby; bare soffit to stairs.
    (thanks to skyewright, I get the point, but space will be tight...) however, will try !

    Rest of cubby volume filled with jerrycans and hi-strength poly bottles, for maximum water capacity.

    Free ends of coils routed through penetrations in the crosswall, into the crawlspace, to main thermal store and circulator.

    The cubby now contains (about) 200 liters of static water, with a further 50 lm x 113 cc = 5.6 liters of circulating heat if PEX), or 2.25 l (if copper).

    Not much of a maths person, but reasoning like the layman I am, the volume of “involved” concrete ought to be something like: (volume of stair cage) minus (volume of air) = 0.7 cubic meters. This is for the 7-tread flight only, and does not take account of the cage walls (which will be insulated from the cubby side with 30-mm XPS).

    Since concrete holds only about half the heat of water, if I have 200 liters of water at, say, 40°C, for 100% of my available heat, then 800 liters of concrete at, say, 16°C, should be able to accommodate twice my available heat, therefore the system ought to work. Would anybody be prepared to guess the likely increase in temps of my stair flight ?

    Many thanks again,


    gyrogear
    • CommentAuthorskyewright
    • CommentTimeAug 17th 2015 edited
     
    You might be interested in some of the home made water based thermal stores on BuildItSolar?

    e.g.

    http://www.builditsolar.com/Projects/SpaceHeating/SolarShed/Tank/Tank.htm

    and

    http://www.builditsolar.com/Projects/SpaceHeating/DHWplusSpace/TankDesign.htm

    and others linked from

    http://www.builditsolar.com/Projects/WaterHeating/water_heating.htm

    And of course Nick Pine's "Solar Closet" idea

    http://www.ece.villanova.edu/~nick/solar/solar.html
    • CommentAuthorCWatters
    • CommentTimeAug 17th 2015
     
    One wonders what sort of gear you want to grow under there :-)
    • CommentAuthorgyrogear
    • CommentTimeAug 18th 2015
     
    Well, nothing actually !

    (I just want a warmer staircase !) (for as FREE as possible !)

    gg
    • CommentAuthorskyewright
    • CommentTimeAug 18th 2015
     
    Posted By: gyrogearWell, nothing actually !
    (I just want a warmer staircase !) (for as FREE as possible !)

    Hence my emphasis on the floor insulation (on which I realise you get the point now). :)

    If you are going for water then the floor is not quite so critical (but still important) because convection will take the greatest heat to the top of the water containers. If it were solid concrete then heat would be moving in the block by conduction rather than convection & conduction is just outward from the source rather than biased towards up[1]. It's the staircase (& the stair well above it?) you want to be warmer, not the ground below the cubby. :)


    [1] "Heat" as such doesn't have weight! At the risk of teaching about the sucking of eggs...
    "Heat rises" convection is a gravity based side effect of heat causing a fluid material (gas is "fluid" in this sense) to expand, making it less dense & resulting in denser material above sinking & forcing the lighter (warmer) material to rise.

    The same logic explains why in water heat sinks at just above zero (much to the benefit of pond life) because the water starts to expand as it cools those last few degrees before zero!

    End of lecture... :bigsmile:
    • CommentAuthorgyrogear
    • CommentTimeAug 19th 2015 edited
     
    Posted By: jamesingramwhen you say heat store do you mean a standard HW cylinder you heat via ST and take water off or a heatstore you heat up but use as a permanent heat store ( usually larger than 240l with various take off points) and then get HW via a heat exchange.
    search vikinghouse website think he got some info on a pex/concrete heat dump they did a while back.


    Well, the heat store is still in the "design phase". I want "free heat", so I am thinking of a solar collector. I took a look at the tanks on Build-it-Solar (thanks to Skyewright again...) (also for the gravity-based bit, which I liked!), and I also looked at the Viking House tanks proposed by Triassic - all very interesting stuff but "somewhat large" for my place ! I reckon I'd go for a multidrum storage such as this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n90Y6Qwab_8 -- it would be inside my crawl space.
    According to my dream sheet, it would provide "simple" radiant heat to warm thermal mass; would also pre-heat DHW; and I would pull water off it, into various PEX loops within the CS.

    The idea of including the staircase cubby in this scheme occurred to me last of all, but I suspect it is one of the "best bits", since it puts heat directly into the "livable volume" of the house. Whence my efforts to "get it right"...

    thanks again for all the suggestions !
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeAug 19th 2015
     
    Posted By: gyrogearthermal mass
    Running away now.
    Mass has thermal properties, thermal does not have mass.

    At the risk of sounding like a stuck record (thanks Dave :wink:), learn the difference between temperature and energy.
  2.  
    how much solar thermal (ST) you considering . In the heating season HW may be all you can do even with a large collector
    • CommentAuthorgyrogear
    • CommentTimeAug 19th 2015
     
    Posted By: jamesingramhow much solar thermal (ST) you considering . In the heating season HW may be all you can do even with a large collector


    well, I have a south-facing area where I could get about a hundred square foot, without making the neighbours suspicious...

    gg
    • CommentAuthorgyrogear
    • CommentTimeDec 7th 2015
     
    Rethinking this after several weeks'-worth of beers etc., and after some fit-tests, I could get 3 rolls of big PEX in the cubby, and embed them in dry gravel and sand (or even concrete...).

    The coils are plumbed in parallel, to brass manifolds.

    The dump would be driven by hot water from the return line back to the heat-pump water tank.

    So the circulator (on a timer control) would be pushing the returning water through a bypass and into the PEX.

    gg
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeDec 7th 2015
     
    How much do you want to spend to get your free heat?
    Have you considered PV instead of ST, it is cheaper.
    Then you can get some old storage heaters and wire them in with a suitable controller/switch gear.
    No plumbing to worry about, no chance of leak, no maintenance, silent and very reliable.
    • CommentAuthorGotanewlife
    • CommentTimeDec 7th 2015 edited
     
    Posted By: SteamyTeaHave you considered PV instead of ST, it is cheaper.
    Aaaaaw ST, there you go spoiling everyone's fun - cheap PV has certainly changed the our playground hasn't it! And esp in this case surely it would be better overall, if less fun.........
    • CommentAuthorgyrogear
    • CommentTimeDec 7th 2015 edited
     
    oops? Maybe nobody noticed, but...

    My original design has *changed* - I now intend to drive the heat dump from plain old HOT *water*, from my thermodynamic DHW tank...

    Reasoning: the tank is 300 liters and that is a lot of heat just "hanging around" all day.

    So I thought that shunting 15 of those liters into Thermal Mass could be somewhat useful.

    No way I want PV, thanks !
    Nobody else has it in my part of the world (16,000 population, and I know of two houses with PV on the roof).
    Round here, PV is for charging boat batteries !
    (Even the cold-callers seem to have got the message)

    gg
  3.  
    You can probably save more by turning down the DHW thermostat a couple of degrees or moving it higher up the tank.

    David
    • CommentAuthorgyrogear
    • CommentTimeDec 8th 2015 edited
     
    Posted By: davidfreeboroughYou can probably save more by turning down the DHW thermostat a couple of degrees or moving it higher up the tank.


    Thanks, but it's not a question of saving, it's a quesion of getting *heat* into a cold area, namely the building core.

    gg
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeDec 8th 2015
     
    Don't you want the thermal energy in the air within the building?
    • CommentAuthorgyrogear
    • CommentTimeDec 8th 2015 edited
     
    Posted By: SteamyTeaDon't you want the thermal energy in the air within the building?


    Yes, of course, and I have that...
    It is a decent day here, I have 22.1°C in the lounge.
    We have no heating on; will just run the WBS for a couple of hours this evening.
    Tomorrow morning the lounge will be at 20.6° or so, like today.

    However the basement "lags" - it is generally 2°C cooler than upstairs.
    So I am working on a whole house fan installation, to mitigate stack effect.
    Some of the cross-ventilation airstream will be UP the stairs.
    I also wanted to *warm* the concrete stairs.
    So borrowing off the DHW seemed like a good idea; if I can get the temps right...

    gg
    • CommentAuthorcjard
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2015
     
    If you want to warm your stairs, why not just fix pert-Al-pert (nicer than pex, stays bent) to the underside, then render/concrete it in? Would warm them better than anything else considered so far..
    • CommentAuthorgyrogear
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2015 edited
     
    Thanks for the suggestion ! Would effectively consider that. Would allow me to pre-bend the matrix, then jam it to the underside like you say.

    Access being pretty tight (we are looking at a half of a one-meter cube, split along the diagonal...), and to save on materials, I'm thinking of adding suitable spragging, then a "lost form board" made of 50mm XPS, onto which the concrete is thrown, to get it to slide down to the "sharp end".

    This would give me an "inclined hydronic slab" about six to eight inches thick, contiguous to the stair soffit.

    If 25 meters of 16mm tube, then 2.82 liters of water x TD of 20k = 54 kcal or 62 watt-hours; for 1.4 square meters... = 38 wh/m2.

    Compared with my infloor radiant electric which has an installed power of 6.5 kW for 100 m2,
    and which consumes (cold winter, not this one...) around 27 kWh per day (if on...).

    Does this look anywhere near OK ?

    gg
    • CommentAuthorcjard
    • CommentTimeDec 13th 2015 edited
     
    Oh, and if you want some pipe and are prepared to send Hermes(or some other reasonable priced courier co) to my house to pick it up, you can have one of my off cuts.. I've a few lengths of 16mm pert Al pert around 30m and they're no good to me because they're too short for any of my planned runs.. Saves it going to waste even if it is only a £15 or so monetary saving on the cost of the pipe..
    • CommentAuthorgyrogear
    • CommentTimeDec 13th 2015
     
    Thanks for the offer, but I'm probably out of area. Also, don't want any joins inside the thing: will probably end up with 3 x 25 meter rolls, to manifolds in air.

    gg
   
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