Friday, September 21, 2007

Heating Your Showers with Your Cooling Tower




Most large buildings are throwing heat away for many hours of the year. In a large facility, this is most often accomplished by way of a cooling tower. Commonly, the cooling tower cools water from about 95º to around 85º. Many hundreds of thousands of btuh's from lighting, solar loads, equipment and any of the myriad heat load sources in these facilities are rejected to the atmosphere in this cooling process. Wouldn't it be nice if you could reclaim some of that heat and use it for a something that always requires heat input, like domestic water heating?

Sure, you could take the cooling tower water and run it through a heat exchanger to preheat the makeup water from the city utility before it enters your hot water heater, but that would only offset part of the heating load. The highest temperature you could reach would be on the order of 93º--any higher would require artificially allowing the condenser water to heat up, penalizing the efficiency of the chiller it serves.

It would be a lot more convenient if there were some way to use the heat in the condenser water loop to create higher temperature water--water that could be directly used to heat domestic water. And that is exactly why Colmac developed their HPW series of water-to-water heat pumps, specifically designed for domestic service.

These heat pumps include a circulating hot water pump and a double-wall heat exchanger as required for domestic service. They can directly heat the domestic water to temperatures of 140º or higher, using water as cold as 55º. This means that they can actually be used to pre-cool chilled water to reduce load on a chiller, as well as take waste heat out of a condenser line.

Florida Heat Pump also has a full line of water-to-water heat pumps for similar heat recovery jobs. These are a competitive alternative when domestic water service is not required, or where an external heat exchanger can be provided to meet domestic service requirements. These are also very flexible alternatives to traditional central plant chillers, with the ability to reverse cycle and provide hot water or cold, and come in convenient modular sizes for ease of installation and efficient capacity staging.

And there is no reason to stop at considering condenser water systems for sources of heat. Using water-to-water heat pumps, any source of flow that carries waste heat can be utilized to provide usable energy for your system. Why not pump heat out of your sewer lines? Luckily for the creative energy engineer, smells aren't transfered by the refrigeration cycle!

No comments: