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Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition
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    • CommentAuthorGarethC
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015 edited
     
    You've all heard my grand (ok, not really) plans to use A2A heat pumps to reduce, hopefully, the carbon (by 40%) and cost (by 25%) of my space heating compared to my current, high efficiency combi gas boiler at reasonable installation cost (circa £2k).

    I can't for the life of me decide what I, or someone in my position, would do about DHW, though. The economist in me says that, given the current cost of my hot water, any solution would have to cost about £1k installed maximum, and preferably £750. Can anyone think of a system that provides hot water at significantly lower cost and carbon than a natural gas boiler for this amount? Or are usage reduction measures the only sensible way to go?

    Just let me know if I've missed any recent threads on this question.
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015 edited
     
    Yes hot water (the temp it has to reach, even if the energy reqd is relatively small) is the determinant that can out-vote clever ideas for space heating.

    Given that for hot water there has to be some kind of heat generator of a type that's capable of high temp output, the logic soon appears that you might as well make that single generator a bit bigger, to handle space heating too, rather than the capital cost of 2, duplicated systems.

    All you can set against that logic, is the lifetime running cost of the space heating as an add-on to the water heating, which might have had cheaper running cost (and/or carbon cost) as a separate, dedicated space heating system.

    About your plan, above - are you sure that an A2A heat pump actually save 40% (or any) carbon?

    If run entirely off your own off-grid PVs or windmill, or a hydro-electric dominated grid (Canada, Norway), that's one thing.
    But if it's using the source-mix of UK grid electricity (incl part-substitution by your own PV or windmill), that heat pump may use less electricity at point of use, but lots of carbon is exhausted to waste at the fossil power station (not to mention nuclear).

    A high efficiency gas boiler is completely unbeatable, as far as fossil carbon in to heat out ratio, even when producing heat at needlessly high temp for space heating. Nothing fossil-electric can come close to a high efficiency gas boiler, from that POV.
    • CommentAuthorGarethC
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015
     
    Defra says that natural gas emits 0.184 kgCO2e/kWh. Given 85% boiler efficiency, that's 0.217 kg/kWh delivered to space heating. They say that electricity produces 0.462 kg/kWh. (see: http://tinyurl.com/nwc4rlq).

    (As an aside, this site: http://tinyurl.com/kmcyvo suggest an average grid intensity of much less than 400 - don't know where the differences come from).

    Anyway, using Defra's figures, you need a SPF of 2.13 in order for an electric heat pump to emit less carbon than natural gas. To achieve a 40% reduction in carbon relative to natural gas, you only need an SPF of 3.55.

    As discussed in other threads, empirical evidence shows that A2A heat pumps manage SPFs of around 4 in Sweden. I'd expect them to manage at least this in the UK, and even better if I wait for R32 based systems (but there's too much of a premium).

    Long story short, for these reasons I expect to achieve -at least- 40% carbon savings, and I'd hope for near 50%.
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015
     
    Nice concise evidence there - interesting to hear what others think of it?

    I'd a thought a modern combi to do much better than 85%, even allowing for stop/start etc inefficiencies. In addition, no water storage heat losses. And SPF of 4 sound surprising to me - I thought 3 if you're lucky - has A2A become specially effective? Why should SPF do better in humid muggy UK, than colder drier-winter-air Sweden?
    • CommentAuthorGarethC
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015
     
    The -claimed- SCOPs of A2As are much higher than A2W devices. I think the difference is because a) output temps are lower than A2W, and b) they're far simpler machines. This unit claims 5.2: http://tinyurl.com/omsseja. The same unit, actually tested over a year in Malmo, managed 4.1 in practise.

    Now, Malmo's colder on average than the UK (colder even than Edinburgh) AND suffers greater extremes of cold temperature. Both these things would tend to argue that results in the UK should be better. On the other hand, as you say, our higher humidity would mean that defrost cycles would be more frequent. All told, I'd expect the former issue to trump the latter, BUT, to be conservative, I still tend to assume that I'd get 4 (which several units tested in Malmo achieved). Once R32 arrives, I might have the courage to bump that up to 4.4 or something.

    DECC or DEFRA recently published a study that found that even the best, most modern system boilers achieved 80%, and similar combi boilers 85% (might even have been the other way around!). But I can't find the link to it at the moment. Results for DHW were really poor. I think something like 65%.
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015
     
    From a quick look at my DHW needs and comparing them to our old mate Damon HD, if I used a an instantaneous heater I could probably cut my energy usage to a quarter of what I currently use (a lot less standing losses from the store). I assume that Damon HD is almost as clean as me (I have met him, pre beard, and there was no noticeable odour, but a beard can do strange thing to a man).

    If you oversize an ASHP, then you get less frosting (by the time it has frosted up it has heated the water anyway). If you lower the temperature of the stored hot water, you also get less frosting (just does not need to pass so much air though the heat exchanger).

    Are the humidity levels in the populated parts of Sweden (general coastal) much different to ours?
    • CommentAuthorGarethC
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015
     
    Doesn't that mean that your DHW system is only 25% efficient, max?? Did you mean cut your energy usage BY 25%?

    You use E7, don't you, so despite the decrease in energy usage, presume the actual cost would rise? Is there a thread you can link to where you discuss this?

    IIRC, I don't think I managed to find comparative RH stats. I remember that precipitation is a lot lower in Malmo than the UK, which would result in lower RH, as would the lower average temperature I think?
    • CommentAuthormike7
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015 edited
     
    You'd expect the SCOP of a DHW heat pump to be higher than for one doing space heating as it would spend a bigger proportion of its time in mild COP-friendly temperatures.

    My solution to Gareth's question would to try putting a refrigerant-to-water heat exchanger in the hot line of a small aircon unit - I'll try this when I get a round tuit.
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015
     
    Posted By: mike7You'd expect the SCOP of a DHW heat pump to be higher than for one doing space heating as it would spend a bigger proportion of its time in mild COP-friendly temperatures.
    Against that, the DHW heat pump will be reqd to produce high output temp all the time, while a space heating one can output at low temp much of the time.
  1.  
    I have the same problem as I installed Ashp to displace oil boiler for CH, but retained the combi oil boiler for Dhw.
    The relative low cost of energy for small dhw usage did not justify installing any expensive energy saving heat source especially for dhw.

    Several years later, the oil boiler is nearing end of life and costing a lot for repairs. Dilemma:
    - seems silly to buy replacement oil boiler just for DHW
    - any other solution (solar etc) would require an expensive cylinder and removal of flue and fuel supply.
    - or switch to instantaneous water heaters, expensive to run and high co2.

    Either way I'm looking at significant cost/hassle. In hindsight I should have included dhw when changing the CH source and picked a solution that could do them both.
    • CommentAuthormike7
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015
     
    Posted By: fostertom
    Posted By: mike7You'd expect the SCOP of a DHW heat pump to be higher than for one doing space heating as it would spend a bigger proportion of its time in mild COP-friendly temperatures.
    Against that, the DHW heat pump will be reqd to produce high output temp all the time, while a space heating one can output at low temp much of the time.


    Aircon style HPs modulate their output - I anticipate it would be possible to arrange for the output temp to ramp up as the tank temp rises, so avoiding the supposed need for permanent high temp.
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015
     
    You're geting hot water out of an aircon-style HP?
    • CommentAuthorGarethC
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015
     
    Mike7's right. So long as you're happy with 40 degree hot water, a heat pump -should- be great for DHW. I presume that it's poor space heating performance, due to using water to transfer heat via big radiators and other complexities, that screws up the SCOP performance of conventional Air to Water systems, not DHW production.

    So what I'd like to buy is a typical multi-split air con type system, which can manage an SCOP of 4+ for space heating and which, if installed on a standalone basis, would cost around my £2k.

    But what we need is a system where, over night, when not being used for heating, refrigerant from the same outside unit is instead diverted to heat a (preferably existing) hot water tank. That feels like something that shouldn't be too difficult or expensive for a manufacturer to produce for my marginal £1k.

    A caveat is that, if I recall correctly, Japanse EcoCute systems, which do DHW only, don't have spectacular SCOPs. But that might reflect tank losses, which is the same thing that causes gas boilers to manage relatively poor performances for DHW.

    If we assume that's the case, then, a natural gas boiler emits 0.263kg/kWh of hot water if it does so at 70% efficiency (I'll dig out the actual figures when I have time, but it's something like this). Then you'd only need the DHW part of the heat pump to deliver an SCOP of 1.8 to break even in carbon terms, whereas I think it should deliver about 3.

    So, now I just need to give the nice people at Mitsubishi a bell and ask them to produce a new type of system just for me...
    • CommentAuthorGarethC
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015
     
    Incidentally, Will, the inefficiencies of boilers at providing hot water mean that direct electric heating would be 'only' 80% worse in terms of carbon than gas.

    We've got an electric shower and one that comes off the boiler in our house. The flow rate of the electric one is significantly slower (but not too bad), so I use quite a lot less water showering in that one. Together with the above, it's probably not all that much less green than the gas heated shower!

    Given the very modest capital cost, it might be worth going for direct electric for hot water. You won't do your green credentials that much damage if you're also frugal with water.

    Will cost about twice as much (very roughly) in water heating costs, but the capital cost savings will make up for many years of that, and no expensive servicing of equipment needed.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015
     
    Posted By: GarethCI remember that precipitation is a lot lower in Malmo than the UK, which would result in lower RH

    It's right on the coast, so RH will be dominated by the sea, not the rain.
  2.  
    I posted links on here previously to a product called the Rikon Waterbox which used to be produced and sold here in Sweden which used half the output of the largest Panasonic air to air heat pump (12kW?) to produce DHW.

    The website is down now and a quick Google doesn't come up with much but I can see that the owner of the company is 74 years old so perhaps the product has retired with him.

    It was a bit of a McGyver of an affair with a large copper coil inside and from memory cost around £800-£1000 retail.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015
     
    Posted By: mike7You'd expect the SCOP of a DHW heat pump to be higher than for one doing space heating as it would spend a bigger proportion of its time in mild COP-friendly temperatures.

    My brain hurts. What does that mean. The delta T for DHW is a lot greater than that for space heating, so how come a greater COP?

    My solution to Gareth's question would to try putting a refrigerant-to-water heat exchanger in the hot line of a small aircon unit - I'll try this when I get a round tuit.

    Wasn't that what the Japanese tried before they came up with ecocute HPs?

    Posted By: GarethCMike7's right. So long as you're happy with 40 degree hot water, a heat pump -should- be great for DHW. I presume that it's poor space heating performance, due to using water to transfer heat via big radiators and other complexities, that screws up the SCOP performance of conventional Air to Water systems, not DHW production.

    40 °C is too low for a stored hot water supply (leg***ella), or for filling a bath, and is marginal for a shower. Passivhaus compact units presumably represent something like the state of the art?

    Posted By: GarethCGiven the very modest capital cost, it might be worth going for direct electric for hot water. You won't do your green credentials that much damage if you're also frugal with water.

    Will cost about twice as much (very roughly) in water heating costs, but the capital cost savings will make up for many years of that, and no expensive servicing of equipment needed.

    Ooh, did I hear that properly? I have a direct electric thermal store which has been powered solely by PV up until two days ago when I had to give it a boost. I haven't yet bought any space heating gear (we have an old fan heater or two for any emergencies) but at the moment it still looks like direct electric for me.

    Keep up the good work, Gareth. You might yet convert me!
    • CommentAuthorringi
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2015
     
    What about heating a small thermal store to 40c with the heat pump, then using a direct electric heater for the last 15c of heat?

    (PV could be allowed to heat the thermal store higher when you have PV output.)

    Even just putting a thermal sore coil in your CH buffer tank and running the buffer tank at 30c (for ufh) would give a nice preheat to the DHW.
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeSep 4th 2015 edited
     
    <blockquote><cite>Posted By: GarethC</cite>Doesn't that mean that your DHW system is only 25% efficient, max?? Did you mean cut your energy usage BY 25%?</blockquote>
    I meant that my cylinder looses a lot of heat (but have since insulated it more).

    Part of the problem is that I use little hot water, so in effect have a very oversized cylinder.

    I did post up my findings somewhere on here, and over at the other place, but did not book mark it, so struggling to find it right now.

    Just trying to get some weather data from Sweden.
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeSep 4th 2015 edited
     
    Right, here is a couple of charts, Sweden is a weather station near Gothenberg, and Scotland is one near Aberdeen.
    So not absolutely, totally comprehensive (I am sure there is someone that lives in a special micro climate that is totally different and will prove me totally wrong, about everything I have ever done :wink:).
    But it is good enough to get a general picture about what is important and what isn't.

    Now the RH shows a larger difference, with Sweden being dryer until it gets to 0°C, then they tend to match to 19°C.
    But relative humidity is of little interest when talking about ASHP frosting, absolute humidity, the real mass of water in a cubic metre, is what matters.
    Now each ASHP installation will be different, things like mass air flow though the unit, the temperature difference between the refrigerant and the air, the temperature difference between the water flow temperatures will all effect how often an ASHP frosts.
    Then there is the degree of frosting and how that translates to the CoP degradation.

    But here are the charts anyway.
      RH.jpg
      Abs.jpg
    • CommentAuthorgravelld
    • CommentTimeSep 4th 2015
     
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeSep 4th 2015
     
    Yes, have had quite long discussions with Jeremy (and others).

    Trouble I have is that the capital costs of an upgrade is greater than the running costs.
    I am a pragmatic person, not an idealist. I believed Tony Blair when he said that we are entering a 'new nuclear age' (not).
  3.  
    Aberdeen has a strange microclimate off the sea and spends all summer under a seafog bank called "the Haar". No worries though, your data is probably from Dyce airport which is 5miles inland and only gets the fog in the evenings. Surprised to see any data points above 25degC ! Aberdeen has 30% less rainfall than Glasgow.

    Back to the original topic, any scheme that means installing a cylinder is going to be tough on the OP's £1k budget, especially if you need to build a cupboard to put it in. Maybe best stick with the combi, at least till it needs replacement?

    Or look at gas-fired instantaneous dhw heater, more power and less CO2 than electric instantaneous heater. Anyone tried these?
  4.  
    ''Or look at gas-fired instantaneous dhw heater, more power and less CO2 than electric instantaneous heater. Anyone tried these?''

    Multipoints? Yes, used them for years. When I worked in Social Housing we had a couple of hundred of them, in the days before central heating was a given.
    • CommentAuthorDarylP
    • CommentTimeSep 7th 2015
     
    We have used 'Rinnai' dhw heaters. They work straight out of the box, and modulate well.
    Adjustable output temp, and can accept inputs up to 65 IIRC?

    Cheers:smile:
    •  
      CommentAuthorjoe90
    • CommentTimeSep 7th 2015 edited
     
    I have to make my mind up about this subject for my new build and my current thinking ( no mains gas available) is an ASHP (40 degrees) for UFH and some hot taps (warm) but an inline modulating electric water heater for kitchen, shower and bath to top this up to hot hot. Like JSH from the other place the ASHP can be used to cool the slab in case we actually get a hot summer! I had intended to install PV but this is probably scuppered by the government on fit changes. As my build is still yet to pass planning I am open to suggestions.
    • CommentAuthorGarethC
    • CommentTimeSep 7th 2015
     
    Thanks all for the input. Sorry been AWOL.

    UK vs. Sweden performance: Malmo’s avg. temp is 8.1 degrees. Edinburgh’s is 9.3. Malmo has 14% more heating degree days at 15.5 degrees base temp and 41% more HDDs at ten degrees base. i.e. Malmo gets much colder than even Edinburgh, and that kills COP. With ST's data suggesting similar humidity, I'm fairly sure 4 is a conservative target COP (in England, you should get significantly better). WHY can't someone do a UK study!? I've contacted DECC in the past directly to suggest one.

    Rikon Waterbox: Would be great to see a schematic, but I can't find one. Did it use a multi-split? You could use a four indoor unit multisplit, diverting one line instead to the DHW cylinder, then have that one come on overnight when others aren't in use, thereby being able to use all the outdoor unit's output.

    Will's right that tank cost buggers things up if you haven't one already. If so, at £400 (+ installation) Rinnai units might be best for combi owners. Should be able to swap into where the combi is easily, and probably at least a bit more efficient. I've found the report I referred to (http://tinyurl.com/ocun5d6) which found that combis are 73% efficient for DHW (and regular boilers 38% on average! But with large variation).
    • CommentAuthorborpin
    • CommentTimeSep 7th 2015
     
    One other consideration is the DHW flow requirement. If it is a house for 2 then this is lower. A house with a couple of teenagers in is different as likelihood of 2 showers simultaneously is much higher! Next house has all the taps close together (short runs) and likely to be high flow instant gas but could be Electric depending on the economics (PV etc) at the time. I would not have a tank again.
  5.  
    http://www.rinnaiuk.com/hotechnology/technology/condensing-water-heaters/

    This vendor claims 107% efficiency vs LHV due to very low condensing temp of incoming cold water feed.

    Maybe not worthwhile investing to preheat the water with ashp as would reduce condensing flue gas effect?

    They come in LPG variant so might be good alternative for off gas grid, in parallel with ashp for space heating. My dhw usage would use about 4 of those orange propane cylinders a year so no LPG tank required.

    I'm suddenly interested - anyone see a drawback?

    The really cheap ones (different brands) seem to be aimed at caravans, so flow a bit low.
    • CommentAuthorDarylP
    • CommentTimeSep 8th 2015
     
    Will,

    We have only used the LPG Rinnais, for 'off grid' dwellings. They work well.
    Yes, you do 'lose' the condensing efficiency if the incoming water temp is warm, but you save on gas burned, so it evens out.
    The units have a setting for desired DHW temp, and they modulate up/down to satisfy that demand.
    The 50kW jobbie can manage 2 x showers simultaneously with no problems, even in winter with no solar help.

    Cheers :smile:
   
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