ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL
CHILLER, BOILER, AND DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM CONTROL APPLICATIONS
325
CHILLER HEAT RECOVERY SYSTEM
A chiller heat recovery system uses heat rejected from a chiller
to satisfy a simultaneous heating load. To accomplish this the
heating water design temperature becomes the condenser water
design temperature for the chiller. A typical simultaneous cooling
and heating load includes an interior zone cooling load and a
perimeter zone heating load. When the cooling load is greater
than the heating load, the excess heat is dissipated in a cooling
tower. The control strategy is to use as much heat as needed from
the condenser and to reject excess heat to the cooling tower when
necessary.
Figure 32 shows a heat recovery system and control sequence
for a cooling system with one chiller and a double bundle
condenser where chiller capacity is controlled from the chilled
water supply temperature. The double bundle condenser uses heat
recovery water or cooling tower water or both to cool refrigerant.
Cooling tower water cannot be mixed with heat recovery water
so the two systems must be isolated. In a single chiller system,
the control system checks the water temperature coming out of
the heat recovery bundles (T3). If it is warmer than the water
returning from the heating loads (T2), valve V1 opens to circulate
condenser water through the system. A hot water generator (boiler
or converter) provides additional heat as required. If the heat
recovery system is not cooling the condenser sufficiently, the
cooling tower is used to dissipate excess heat. In multiple chiller
systems, the heat recovery chiller is controlled by the heating
load (T1). The other chillers provide additional cooling as required.
Fig. 32. Heat Pump Cycle Controls and Sequence.
COOLING
TOWER
FOR MULTIPLE CHILLERS
THIS IS REPLACED
BY CAPACITY
CONTROL OF HEAT
REJECTION CHILLER
C2696
TEMPERATURE
AT T1 (
°
F)
110
105
100
95
ACTION
OFF
IF T3 > T2,
THEN T1 CONTROLS V1
(CONDENSER HEAT)
ON
OPEN
OA DAMPER
COOLING
CLOSED
CLOSED
V2 CONTROLLED
BY T1
OPEN
FOR MULTIPLE CHILLERS
THIS IS REPLACED BY
CAPACITY CONTROL OF
HEAT REJECTION CHILLER
SHUT OFF OA
COOLING ON
FAN UNITS
HEAT
SOURCE
T1
LOAD
HOT WATER
GENERATOR
V2
V1
T2
T3
REFRIGERANT CIRCUIT
(REMOVING HEAT FROM
INTERIOR ZONES)
DOUBLE
BUNDLE
CONDENSER
T
If chilled water reset is used, stop the reset action when the
cooling tower is off. This provides recovery system heat to a lower
outdoor temperature before it is necessary to use fuel for heating.
FREE COOLING-TOWER COOLING
When the condenser water temperature from an evaporative
cooling tower is equal to or lower than chilled water load
requirements, mechanical refrigeration is not needed. During
these times “free cooling” from the evaporative cooling tower
is available without having to supply energy to the compressor.
Figures 33, 34, and 35 show three methods of providing tower
cooling to the chilled water circuit.
In refrigerant vapor migration (Fig. 33) two refrigerant paths
with migration valves are added between the condenser and
the evaporator. The paths bypass the compressor and allow
gravity flow of liquid refrigerant from condenser to evaporator
and vapor flow from evaporator to condenser. Refrigerant
vaporizes in the evaporator and migrates to the condenser where
it is condensed by cooling tower water. The liquid then flows
back to the evaporator by gravity. The chiller must be designed
so the flow paths are unrestricted and the evaporator is lower
than the condenser. The bypass valves are normally included
as a chiller package option by the manufacturer.
Fig. 33. Free Cooling Using
Refrigerant Vapor Migration.
CONDENSER
COMPRESSOR
EVAPORATOR
LOAD
CHILLED
WATER
PUMP
REFRIGERANT
MIGRATION
VALVES
CONDENSER
WATER
PUMP
COOLING
TOWER
TOWER
HEATER
(OPTIONAL)
C2697
Summary of Contents for AUTOMATIC CONTROL
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Page 6: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL vi ...
Page 11: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL CONTROL FUNDAMENTALS 1 CONTROL SYSTEMS FUNDMENTALS ...
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Page 46: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL CONTROL FUNDAMENTALS 36 ...
Page 66: ...PSYCHROMETRIC CHART FUNDAMENTALS 56 ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL ...
Page 128: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATION CONTROL ELECTRIC CONTROL FUNDAMENTALS 118 ...
Page 158: ...MICROPROCESSOR BASED DDC FUNDAMENTALS 148 ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL ...
Page 210: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL BUILDING MANAGEMENT SYSTEM FUNDAMENTALS 200 ...
Page 440: ...ENGINEERING MANULA OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL INDIVIDUAL ROOM CONTROL APPLICATIONS 430 ...
Page 516: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL GENERAL ENGINEERING DATA 506 Notes ...
Page 517: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL GENERAL ENGINEERING DATA 507 Notes ...
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