ASHRAE HVAC SYSTEMS AND EQUIPMENT IP CH 51-2012 THERMAL STORAGE.pdf
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1、51.1CHAPTER 51 THERMAL STORAGESensible Thermal Storage Technology . 51.4Chilled-Water Thermal Storage Sizing Examples 51.7Chiller and Ice Storage Selection 51.11Heat Storage Technology . 51.16Sizing Cool Storage Systems 51.22Application of Thermal Storage Systems . 51.24Operation and Control . 51.28
2、Other Design Considerations. 51.30Cost Considerations. 51.32Maintenance Considerations . 51.32Commissioning. 51.33Good Practices. 51.35HERMAL storage systems remove heat from or add heat to aTstorage medium for use at another time. Thermal energy stor-age (TES) for HVAC applications can involve vari
3、ous temperaturesassociated with heating or cooling. High-temperature storage istypically associated with solar energy or high-temperature heating,and cool storage with air-conditioning, refrigeration, or cryogenic-temperature processes. Energy may be charged, stored, and dis-charged daily, weekly, a
4、nnually, or in seasonal or rapid batch processcycles. Currently, most use of thermal storage is cool storage forcomfort and process cooling applications as a way to reduce thetotal utility bill and/or size of cooling equipment, and much of thediscussion in this chapter pertains specifically to cool
5、storage.Dorgan and Elleson (1993) cover cool storage issues and designparameters in detail.A properly designed and installed thermal storage system can Reduce operating or initial costsReduce size of electric service and cooling or heating equipmentIncrease operating flexibilityProvide back-up capac
6、ityExtend the capacity of an existing systemBenefits are discussed further in the Benefits of Thermal Storagesection.Thermal storage may be a particularly attractive approach tomeeting heating or cooling loads if one or more of the followingconditions apply:Loads are of short duration.Loads occur in
7、frequently.Loads are cyclical.Loads are not coincident with energy source availability.Energy costs are time-dependent (e.g., time-of-use energy rates).Charges for peak power demand are high.Utility rebates, tax credits, or other economic incentives are pro-vided for using load-shifting equipment.En
8、ergy supply is limited, thus limiting or preventing the use offull-size nonstorage systems.Facility expansion is planned, and the existing heating or coolingequipment is insufficient to meet the new peak load but has sparenonpeak capacity.Interruption in cooling water cannot be tolerated by a missio
9、n-critical operation.TerminologyCharging. Storing cooling capacity by removing heat from acool storage device, or storing heating capacity by adding heat to aheat storage device.Chiller priority. Control strategy for partial storage systems thatuses the chiller to directly meet as much of the load a
10、s possible,normally by operating at design capacity most of the time. Thermalstorage is used to supplement chiller operation only when the loadexceeds the chiller capacity.Cool storage. As used in this chapter, storage of cooling capacityin a storage medium at temperatures below the nominal temperat
11、ureof the space or process. Demand limiting. A partial storage operating strategy that limitscapacity of HVAC equipment during the on-peak period. Equipmentcapacity may be limited based on its cooling capacity, its electricdemand, or facility demand.Design load profile. Calculated or measured hour-b
12、y-hour cool-ing loads over a complete cooling cycle that are considered to be themaximum total cooling load that must be met by mechanical meansand/or capacity from a cool thermal storage system, provided in agraphical or tabular format.Design operating profile. Equipment operation calculated ormeas
13、ured hour-by-hour, including mechanical refrigeration equip-ment, the thermal storage systems charge or discharge rate, andtemperatures over the entire cooling system operating period.Discharging. Using stored cooling capacity by adding thermalenergy to a cool storage device or removing thermal ener
14、gy from aheat storage device.Encapsulated storage. A latent storage technology that consistsof plastic containers of water or other phase-change material that arealternately frozen and melted by the influence of glycol or other sec-ondary coolant medium in which they are immersed.Full storage. A coo
15、l storage sizing strategy that meets the entirecooling load during a predefined on-peak demand period with dis-charge from the thermal storage system.Fully charged condition. State of a cool thermal storage systemat which, according to design, no more heat is to be removed fromthe storage device. Th
16、is state is reached when the control systemstops the charge cycle as part of its normal control sequence whenthe temperature of media leaving the storage system is equal to thatentering the storage system.Fully discharged condition. State of a cool thermal storage sys-tem at which no more usable coo
17、ling capacity can be delivered fromthe storage device. This state is reached when the control systemstops the discharge cycle as part of its normal control sequencewhen the discharge temperature of media from the storage systemexceeds a predefined temperature.Heat storage. As used in this chapter, s
18、torage of thermal energyat temperatures above the nominal temperature of the space orprocess.Ice harvester. Machine that cyclically forms a layer of ice on asmooth cooling surface, using refrigerant inside the heat exchanger,then delivers it to a storage container by heating the surface of thecoolin
19、g plate, normally by reversing the refrigeration process anddelivering hot gases inside the heat exchanger.Ice-on-coil (ice-on-pipe). Ice storage technology that forms andstores ice on the outside of tubes or pipes submerged in an insulatedwater tank.The preparation of this chapter is assigned to TC
20、 6.9, Thermal Storage.51.2 2012 ASHRAE HandbookHVAC Systems and Equipment Ice-on-coil, external melt. Ice storage technology in whichtubes or pipes (coil) are immersed in water and ice is formed on theoutside of the tubes or pipes by circulating colder secondarymedium or refrigerant inside the tubin
21、g or pipes, and is meltedexternally by circulating unfrozen water outside the tubes or pipesto the load.Ice-on-coil, internal melt. Ice storage technology in which tubesor pipes (coil) are immersed in water and ice is formed on the outsideof the tubes or pipes by circulating colder secondary medium
22、orrefrigerant inside the tubing or pipes, and is melted internally by cir-culating the same secondary coolant or refrigerant to the load.Latent energy storage (latent heat storage). A thermal storagetechnology in which energy is stored within a medium, normallyassociated with a phase change (usually
23、 between solid and liquidstates), for use in cooling or heating the secondary liquid being cir-culated through the system.Load leveling. A partial storage sizing strategy that minimizesstorage equipment size and storage capacity. The system operateswith refrigeration equipment running at its most ef
24、ficient capacityfor 24 h to meet the normal cooling load profile and, when load isless than the chiller output, excess cooling is stored. When loadexceeds chiller capacity, the additional cooling requirement isobtained from the thermal storage.Load profile. Compilation of instantaneous thermal loads
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