Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Greening Small Rooftop Units: Digital Scrolls

Digital scroll compressors offer many benefits to compressorized HVAC equipment, as I have discussed in previous articles. Some of these advantages are obvious, and need little computational support--like the modulating capacity control.

Others, however, could use some numerical support to quantify the advantages they confer. The efficiency advantage these compressors confer is one of these sorts of advantages. While it is easy to conceptually understand how this technology can improve efficiency of compressorized units, how much of an advantage this is depends on a myriad of factors, including the capacity of the unit, the operating schedule of the system, the climactic conditions the system experiences and the application of the system.

The energy advantage will change depending on whether the system operates seven days a week or five, whether the system has multiple or single compressors, whether the system is in Atlanta or Seattle, whether the system is VAV or constant volume and whether the system has hot-gas bypass or not.

Aaon realized that the complexity of this calculation made it difficult to quantify the advantage of this advanced feature. To make it easier to see the energy advantage, Aaon added a simple energy calculation tool to the Engineering Toolkit that they provide with their ECAT32 selection software.



After using the simple drop-down windows to select geographic location (by city), Aaon model number, 5 or 7 day schedule, 12 or 24 hour operation, Constant or VAV fan control you then can select the variable and constant capacity units to compare against each other. Options available include assigning hot gas bypass or not to the lead and/or lag compressors and variable speed or cycling fan control to the condenser fans. Once these options have been selected for both units, you simply hit the "calculate" button and the energy performance summary is generated.



This gives you the energy improvement conferred by the digital scroll as a percentage, and also in a comparative EER the constant capacity compressor system would have to be rated at in order for the energy performance of the two systems to be equal.

Further graphs allow you to examine the bin hours at a given OADB for the geographic location and operating schedule you specified,



and the relative energy performances of both systems at a given OADB.



A little playing around with the system allows a user to quickly find where the energy benefits are greatest. In general, the digital scroll confers the most benefit to single-compressor systems, and systems that require HGBP for constant-capacity compressors, such as VAV systems. The system also highlights the point that HGBP is a very expensive way to to capacity control, since the compressor draws full amps whenever it is running. It is the unique modulating capacity of digital scrolls that really makes a difference in these sorts of applications.

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