Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
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Posted By: CWattersIf you could make a 1kW low temperature stirling engine with an efficiency of say 50% then in theory a GSHP could be self powered making it almost 100% green.
Posted By: welshboyIt is very difficult to establish the cop of a heat pump unless you know all the variables. The key to a high Cop is a low lift in the temperature between the groundloop temperature and the heating side.
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http://kanata-forum.ca/cop-outline.pdf" >http://kanata-forum.ca/cop-outline.pdfshows a lift of 25c gives a cop of 4.34 whilst a lift of 30c gives a cop of 3.54.
Posted By: Ed Davies
The sensible options for renewable space heating and domestic hot water are actually pretty limited: solar, wood burning or renewably generated electricity. Have I missed anything?
If you think the zero-carbon homes idea is wrong, i.e., that renewable electricity is more efficiently generated off-site, then heat pumps are the only answer that makes sense for houses for which solar or wood are, for one reason or another, not practical as the complete solution.
Posted By: djhI'm nitpicking, but you're assuming that wind, hydro etc can only be used to make electricity. They can also be used to provide shaft power directly to a heat pump compressor. But good luck on all the engineering to get good performance :)
For the present anyway, off-site electricity in the UK is NOT renewably (or even low-carbon) generated,
Posted By: CWattersThe 1kW used to drive your heat pump might have taken 1.5 to produce.In fact, more like 3kW - approx 3kW of coal etc will have been burnt to produce your 1kW of electricity, which mostly ends up in your heated water and the rest hopefully is emitted within your house's heated enclosure. To that is added 2kW of heat extracted from the local environment. Thus 3kW of coal is burnt to provide your house with 3kW of heated water. In total and in effect a COP3 GSHP is a coal-fired system, in no way renewable powered.
Posted By: tonyAt least it is genuinely 100% efficient thenTrue - so if an in-house coal fired system was 80% efficient (?) and the power station 33% efficient, then a GSHP of COP up to 2.4 wd be wholly coal fired: any heat output over and above that, resulting from a COP higher than 2.4, cd be said to be 'renewable'.
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