Local university upgrading systems to reduce energy consumption costs
Acme University’s building supervisor Greg has been asked to establish a plan to make the institution more energy efficient. Greg first notices that each of the rooms in a specific wing of the campus is being heated at varying temperatures, often higher than needed. Greg contacts his mechanical contractor to determine what adjustments can be made to ensure that controlling the temperature zones in the building is at its highest efficiency level.
Zone control is the process of maintaining a specific temperature in a room of a building on-demand according to the needs of the room. In other words, the goal is to supply treated air to destinations in order to meet, but not exceed, the demand required for that room.
Some rooms in commercial buildings, such as the university’s laboratory, may require that the temperature be a setpoint that isn’t designed for human comfort, but is a controlled environment for experiments to thrive. Whereas others, like classrooms, would require an entirely different environment.
Greg has some options for addressing this issue. He can:
What Greg chooses to do is dependent upon what’s happening with the furnace. Let’s dig a bit deeper into these methods.
Greg explores a simple approach to zone control in the building.
The building that Greg is trouble shooting is large which creates the challenge of treated air losing its temperature before it reaches its desired endpoints. As a result, it must be heated again to ensure that the temperature needed in the room is met.
Many times, course control with an acceptable tolerance is more than adequate to accomplish this. This is where on-off control comes in.
Greg’s challenges with zone control airflow
The university’s building is outfitted with duct heaters that reheats air as it flows from zone to zone. Greg believes that perhaps tighter temperature management is needed than on-off control can provide.
Pulse width modulation would provide adequate control without added costs.
Greg’s challenges with zone control airflow
The university’s building is outfitted with duct heaters that reheats air as it flows from zone to zone. Greg believes that perhaps tighter temperature management is needed than on-off control can provide.
However, the level of control needed does not require the more expensive Proportional, Integral, Derivative (PID) methodology.
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