ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL
CHILLER, BOILER, AND DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM CONTROL APPLICATIONS
379
INSTANTANEOUS CONVERTER CONTROL
An instantaneous converter is the standard type of converter
used in nearly all HTW heating installations because of its
extremely fast response. It is compact and available as standard
equipment.
The HTW flows through several passes of tubing within a
shell just large enough to accommodate the tube bundle.
Secondary water is supplied into the shell and surrounds the
tubes (Fig. 118). Only a small amount of HTW is needed to
heat a large volume of secondary water and the change is nearly
instantaneous. There is no room within the shell for a
temperature sensing element to quickly detect the change,
therefore, the temperature sensor must be located as close to
the converter as possible.
There must be a provision in the control loop to close the
HTW valve as soon as the secondary flow ceases. This requires
proving flow in case the flow stops for a reason other than the
pump is stopped by outdoor temperature, another signal, or
power failure. Even if the HTW valve closes as soon as
secondary water flow stops, flashing is likely to occur as there
is enough HTW in the tubes to overheat secondary water.
Flashing causes water hammer and possible equipment damage.
If shutdown is controlled, closing the HTW valve immediately
and delaying the secondary pump shutdown allows excess heat
in the converter to dissipate.
Fig. 118. Control of HTW to Constant
Temperature Hot Water Converter.
A constant temperature hot water supply is used where a
minimum temperature is required for all or part of the converter
load. Normally a converter for space heating does not require
fast response as the load changes only as fast as occupancy and
outdoor air conditions change. Because of the inherent fast
converter response there are several control requirements:
1. The primary sensing element must be located in outlet
water as close to the converter as possible.
2. A stainless steel well that matches the element with heat
conductive compound in the well must be used.
3. A primary control must be used that has integral action
and integral cutout to allow a wider throttling range for
stability with minimum deviation from setpoint and to
eliminate integral windup.
A control arrangement for a typical zone supplied with HW
from a HTW to constant temperature HW converter is shown
in Figure 119. Water temperature in the converter shell must be
reset from the outdoor air temperature for best control. Zones
typically are also reset from outdoor temperature.
Fig. 119. Typical Zone Control of Constant
Temperature HW from HTW Instantaneous Converter.
For modulating control, instantaneous converters must
operate with at least half design flow. To accomplish this, reset
schedules of controller C1 (Fig. 118) and C2 are arranged so
that valve V2 will be between half and full open to the converter
under normal conditions of operation. The reset schedule for
the converter is slightly higher than the temperature normally
required in the zones so that most of the water to supply the
needs of the zones must come from the converter rather than
the bypass.
C2 as the primary control prevents C3 from positioning V2
so the return water bypasses the converter. If flow is cut off
through the converter, the sensor located in the outlet piping
rather than within the shell cannot control V1 in a stable manner.
The use of an instantaneous converter (Fig. 120) for heating
water supplied directly to an air heating coil provides fast
response. Control system selection problems are the same as
for the control of a coil supplied with low or medium
temperature water except that a high quality valve with fast
control response is required for HTW.
C2934
OUTDOOR
AIR SENSOR
TO HTW
CONVERTER
ZONE
HIGH-LIMIT
INTERLOCKED
TO CLOSE
HTW VALVE
WHEN
ALL PUMPS OFF
MANUAL
BALANCING VALVE
VALVE
V2
CONTROLLER
C2
CONTROLLER
C3
IMMERSION
SENSOR
LOAD
C2582
N.C.
VALVE
HTWR
HTWS
INSTANTANEOUS
CONVERTER
CONTROLLER
IMMERSION
SENSOR
C1
RELAY
FLOW
SWITCH
PUMP
OFF
DELAY
TIMER
OUTDOOR
AIR SENSOR
TO
ZONE(S)
Summary of Contents for AUTOMATIC CONTROL
Page 4: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL iv ...
Page 6: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL vi ...
Page 11: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL CONTROL FUNDAMENTALS 1 CONTROL SYSTEMS FUNDMENTALS ...
Page 12: ......
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 ...
Page 518: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL GENERAL ENGINEERING DATA 508 ...