High Performance or Hype Performance?
Transcription
High Performance or Hype Performance?
High Performance or Hype Performance? Some Real World Data Marc Rosenbaum, P.E. South Mountain Company Martha s Vineyard, MA Efficiency Vermont is a Registered Provider with The American Institute of Architects Continuing Education Systems (AIA/CES). Credit (s) earned on completion of this program will be reported to AIA/CES for AIA members. Certificates of Completion for both AIA members and non-AIA members are available upon request. This program is registered with AIA/CES for continuing professional education. As such, it does not include content that may be deemed or construed to be an approval or endorsement by the AIA of any material of construction or any method or manner of handling, using, distributing, or dealing in any material or product. " " Questions related to specific materials, methods, and services will be addressed at the conclusion of this presentation. Learning Objectives! At the end of this program, participants will be able to:" - Participants will learn how well models conform with actual building performance - Participants will learn the value of sub-metering in diagnosing excessive energy usage - Participants will learn about how minisplit heat pumps and one ground source heat pump perform - Participants will learn how occupant behavior affects energy consumption - Participants will have some fun Course Evaluations! In order to maintain high-quality learning experiences, please access the evaluation for this course by logging into CES Discovery and clicking on the Course Evaluation link on the left side of the page. Copyright materials is presentation is protected by US and International Copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, display and use of the presentation without written permission of the speaker is prohibited. © Marc Rosenbaum 2011 Bindley Residence A Net Zero Deep Energy Retrofit on Squam Lake Before… Aer… Garland Mills Timber Frames e owner was inspired by a session on Zero Net Energy Homes at Building Energy and wanted her renovation to be ZNE. However, Squam Lake is on the north side… South North elevation and a steep hillside with trees is on the south, with Route 3 beyond. So the envelope is extraordinary, to compensate. is is a second home with intermittent occupancy. When occupied it can be occupied by large groups. e first year the house was kept at comfort temperature to get data. Sub-metering has enabled study of energy consumption by end use. Location Area Occupancy Foundation Walls Roof/ceiling Windows Blower door results Mechanical system Metering ! Holderness, NH – Squam Lake ~3,500 ft2 includes conditioned basement Intermittent; vacation home R42 walls, R20 slab R52 R73 R5+ 330 CFM50 W-W GSHP, closed loop vertical; SDHW Utility; PV; GSHP; DHW Strategies include: • Existing sheathing air barrier sealed with peel-and-stick tape. • Eaves cut off for AB continuity • Urethane foam stress skin panels on roof and walls - forms new overhang for the roof • Four inches of rigid foam over the existing slab, then Warmboard • Basement (mostly finished) studded out, seven inches of closed cell spray foam • Walls and roof framing have additional closed cell spray foam • ermotech windows and doors, triple glazed with two low-e layers • Blower door results – 4,000 CFM50 reduced to 330 CFM50 • Renewaire EV130 ERV • WaterFurnace water-water ground source heat pump (GSHP), vertical closed loop ground connection, radiant floor heat • 80 sf solar DHW system, designed so collectors heat the 80 gallon electric tank first then the 120 gallon preheat tank • 7.5 kW solar electric system • Meters on GSHP, DHW back-up, and PV output Collectors heat primary tank first, then solar tank Meters are on the PV inverter output, the heat pump system input, and the DHW back-up input, as well as the utility meter. ere is also a water meter on the incoming water to the DHW system. Meters are read by the owner at varying intervals. Energy Model is is an in-house spreadsheet that performs a monthly energy balance Bindley House Data Energy in kWh Heating Cooling DHW Ventilation Lights/plug/other Energy totals DHW water, gallons Model 2,766 --1,127 Included in other 3,600 7,493 Actual 2,360 --626 Included in other 2,497 5,483 ! Observations: • Data is from 12/6/08 through 12/9/09 • Intermittent occupancy • Water meter mounted near ceiling facing upwards L • GSHP has been working very reliably and efficiently. Modest temperature li between closed loops at about 40F and heat storage tank at 95F, coupled with attentive design to minimize pumping power, have yielded a system that appears to be operating above a COP of 3. • Back-up heating of the DHW tank was using more energy than expected – this was tracked to incorrect wiring of the electric elements in the primary tank and an excessive setpoint. Once corrected, this energy dropped to close to zero. Several months later, it jumped up again – this was tracked to a freeze rupture in one of the collectors. e Prototype Classroom and 1989 Wing A Deep Energy Retrofit at the Plainfield, NH School Marc Rosenbaum, P.E. South Mountain Company Martha s Vineyard, MA Location Area Occupancy Foundation Walls Roof/ceiling Windows Blower door results Mechanical system Metering Plainfield, NH ~8,000 ft2 K-8 Public School R15 slab edge R45 R40 R5+ None Cold climate minisplit heat pump; ERVs Heat pump; ERV; lights ! • • • • Prototype Classroom occupied Fall 2009 1989 Wing occupied Fall 2010 Windows are quad-glazed Serious Windows Minisplits are Mitsubishi Hyperheat, rated to -13F e Prototype Classroom Fix • e Prototype Classroom integrates a Deep Energy Retrofit with distributed HVAC. • It includes: - Skirt the slab-on-grade with 3 inches foam insulation - New quad-glazed Serious windows - New or repaired sheathing used as the air barrier - 6-1/2 inches of added exterior rigid foam and new wood cladding - Room-by-room HVAC - a residential energy recovery ventilator and a minisplit heat pump Floor Plan 1989 Addition Gym 1972 building Prototype Classroom 2000 Addition SPF at eave Windows in TimberStrand extension bucks 3 Polyiso beneath 3-1/2 Nudura EPS panels with integral 1x nailers 3 PerformGuard Perforated fabric duct Indoor heat pump unit Renewaire EV200 energy recovery ventilator 175-180 CFM as installed - 10 CFM/person 151 Watts 85% effectiveness (measured at -3F outdoor air temperature and 70F indoor air temperature) Demand controlled via CO2 No tempering coil Measuring… Heat pump kWh ERV kWh, elapsed time, run time Indoor and outdoor temperature Relative Humidity CO2 Also on-off for lights and ERV Plainfield School District voted 188-57 on March 6th, 2010 for a $275K bond to extend this to the rest of the 1989 addition – this work was performed Summer 2010 12 inch SIPs on flat roof plus tapered insulation © Marc Rosenbaum, P.E. Energysmiths 2010 Structural upgrade © Marc Rosenbaum, P.E. Energysmiths 2010 Prototype Classroom Data Energy in kWh Heating Cooling DHW Ventilation Lights/plug/other Energy totals DHW water, gallons Model Actual 757 Included in heating --184 901 1,842 --- • ! I guessed heating usage would be under 10 kBTU/2/year • is is based on data collected from January 8th through June 18th 2010 • Heating and cooling energy use for the 8,000 2 wing from start of school in Fall 2010 through January 28th, 2011 has been 4,393 kWh, during a period of 4,334 HDD65. Extrapolating to 7,800 HDD65 yields a predicted heating/cooling energy of about 7,900 kWh, or about 1 kWh/2/year. • It’s likely that total energy use in this wing will be less than 2.5 kWh/2/year • A guesstimate of heat pump COP is 2 – 2-1/2. Bement School Residence Hall Margo Jones Architect Location Area Occupancy Foundation Walls Roof/ceiling Windows Blower door results Mechanical system Metering ! Deerfield, MA 11,000 ft2 20 student dormitory and four faculty apartments R19 slab R37 R60 R4 1,490 CFM50 Minisplit VRF heat pumps; ERVs; SDHW; PV Utility; PV; HP; DHW; DHW water; apartments • Four Mitsubishi 3 ton (most efficient) VRF air to air heat pumps with 11 zones - 9 ducted units, 1 wall mount, and 1 floor mount • ree energy recovery ventilators – one for each two faculty apartments and a 450 CFM unit for the dorm spaces • 240 2 drainback solar thermal hot water system • 8.6 kW solar electric system Envelope Mechanicals Meters • Forty 215W Sanyo solar electric panels and a Solectria inverter • Six Heliodyne Gobi solar thermal panels in a drainback configuration with two Vaughn 120 gallon storage tanks Energy Model Bement School Residence Hall Data Energy in kWh Heating Cooling DHW Ventilation fans Lights/plug/other Energy totals DHW water, gallons ! Model 11,267 None (duh) 7,002 6,700 (estimate) 17,300 42,269 280 gpd Actual 12,442 10,231 13,281 6,700 (estimate) 21,655 64,309 193 gpd • is is extrapolated to a full year from 49 weeks of data. • I didn’t envision more than incidental cooling but a drawback to minisplit heat pumps is the ability to cool. e total energy into the heat pumps is measured but the split between heating and cooling is eyeballed from the data. Weekly heat pump energy for cooling exceeded weekly energy for heating! Using “dehumidification mode” increased energy use. • e solar hot water system has never operated properly, increasing energy use by thousands of kWh annually • A guesstimate from early data is that the COP is in the 2-1/2 – 2-3/4 range. Eliakim’s Way Housing South Mountain Company Location Area Occupancy Foundation Walls Roof/ceiling Windows Blower door results Mechanical system Metering West Tisbury, MA 1,200 – 1,350 ft2 each house (2/3 bedroom) Housing R20 walls, R20 slab R29 R49 R5+ 117 – 184 CFM50; 236 CFM50 Habitat Minisplit heat pump; HRV; Radiant panel; PV Utility; PV; HP; DHW; Radiant panels; DHW water ! • • • • • • • Eight affordable homes designed to be ZNE possible 5.04 kW Sunpower solar electric panels Single zone Daikin minisplit heat pump, wall unit in living room Enerjoy electric radiant panels in each bedroom Fantech 704 single speed HRV runs continuously, ~45 CFM Marathon electric water heater PVs are located on the roof to allow additional PV or solar DHW Envelope Mechanicals • Meters are read monthly • HRV wattage at ~35W is too low to reliably read with these meters • Noticed a malfunctioning PV system (beware of 2-1/2 year olds…) • Currently have Hobo dataloggers measuring temperature and RH in all four of the three bedroom houses • Interesting to see variation in usage between houses • Having water meters on the DHW inlet and also kWh meter on the water heater allows calculation of energy used per gallon of DHW • e variation in how occupants use the single zone point source heat pump and the distributed electric radiant panels is interesting Energy Model is model predicts 5.9 kW needed for ZNE performance Energy in kWh Heating Cooling DHW Ventilation Lights/plug/other Energy totals DHW water, gallons ! Model 1,451 --2,673 Included in other 2,700 6,824 36 gpd Actual • Aer seven months, the total usage ranges from 3,028 kWh to 5,938 kWh • I predict two households will achieve ZNE and use less energy than the model, the rest will use more DHW usage per person per day varies from 6 to 18 gallons Energy usage to heat water is about 0.20 kWh/gallon, with about a 75F rise – about a 0.90 EF Thank you! Marc Rosenbaum, P.E. South Mountain Company Martha’s Vineyard, MA
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