Desiccant Air Conditioning Using Solar Heat Energy

2021 ◽  
pp. 444-451
2017 ◽  
Vol 140 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos R. de Nardin ◽  
Felipe T. Fernandes ◽  
Adriano J. Longo ◽  
Luciano P. Lima ◽  
Felix A. Farret ◽  
...  

This paper presents a comparison of air conditioners using the conventional heating, ventilation, and air conditioning heat pumps and the one using solar heat stored underground, also known as shallow geothermal air conditioning. The proposed air conditioner with solar heat stored underground reunites practical data from an implementation of the heuristic perturb-and-observe (P&O) control and a heat management technique. The aim is to find out the best possible heat exchange between the room ambient and the underground soil heat to reduce its overall consumption without any heat pump. Comparative tests were conducted in two similar rooms, each one equipped with one of the two types of air conditioning. The room temperature with the conventional air conditioning was maintained as close as possible to the temperature of the test room with shallow geothermal conditioning to allow an acceptable data validation. The experiments made both in the winter of 2014 and in the summer of 2015 in Santa Maria, South Brazil, demonstrated that the conventional air conditioner consumed 19.08 kWh and the shallow geothermal conditioner (SGC) consumed only 4.65 kWh, therefore, representing a reduction of energy consumption of approximately 75%.


Author(s):  
Raman Kumar Singh ◽  
Saif Nawaz Ahmad ◽  
Neeraj Priyadarshi ◽  
Md Obaidur Rahman ◽  
A K Bhoi

Author(s):  
Samuel Ellison

When an air conditioning engineer is asked to calculate the load for a room such as this, he must know how many people will occupy the room. He must know this because each one of us here is liberating about 400 BTU per hour of heat energy. That is, when we are at rest. If we dance or do some similar exercise, our heat rate goes up to as much as 700 BTU per hour. Paper published with permission.


Energies ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 1274 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yong-Joon Jun ◽  
Young-Hak Song ◽  
Kyung-Soon Park

Author(s):  
J. E. Bannard ◽  
J. Hayden ◽  
P. O’Malley

2016 ◽  
Vol 139 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos R. de Nardin ◽  
Felipe T. Fernandes ◽  
Adriano J. Longo ◽  
Luciano P. Lima ◽  
Felix A. Farret ◽  
...  

This paper describes a perturb-and-observe (P&O) control aiming to increase the heat exchange between solar heat stored underground and the ambient of a single conditioned room without any heat pump. This P&O control increases or decreases the water flow rate through an underground hosepipe heat exchanger. With this purpose, two power converters were used to activate, respectively, a low power water pump and a fan coil so as to keep the room within the limits of a reference temperature range (between 18 °C and 24 °C). Outside these limits, the P&O control searches for the best heat exchange between the ambient room and the underground soil and, when inside these limits, the water pump and fan coil are turned off. Two identical experimental rooms, referred in this study as “reference” and “test” rooms, had their temperatures measured every 1-min during winter and summer. For comparison purposes, the reference room was left at its natural conditions without any air conditioning. The experimental results show a remarkable improvement in the heat exchange and a considerable reduction in power demand when using the P&O control. As a result, it was obtained an energy saving of approximately 45% in one summer day and 22% in one winter day. It is important to point out that this paper refers, strictly, to the description of a P&O control for heat exchange systems involving solar heat stored underground in a single room.


2013 ◽  
Vol 78 (694) ◽  
pp. 947-956
Author(s):  
Fukutaro YAMAGUCHI ◽  
Ryuichiro YOSHIE ◽  
Yoshihisa MOMOI ◽  
Akira SATAKE ◽  
Hiroshi YOSHINO

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