November-December 2006

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Under Control

Whether a building runs on conventional or exotic energy sources, optimizing its energy consumption and satisfying users with the way it operates has never been easier, thanks to a new generation of advanced control technologies for air conditioning and lighting.

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By George Leposky

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Manual Override
Each wireless sensor communicates through its own receiver with the central Tracer ES control system, which is programmed with separate settings for times when a given space is occupied or unoccupied.

“In a commercial space at 6 PM, the control network would turn the lights off and not control the temperature closely—but sometimes people working late need the lights on and a more comfortable working environment,” Kohl explains. “They can press the ‘occupied’ pushbutton on the sensor to notify the control network.

Each wireless sensor communicates through its own receiver with the central Tracer ES control system, which is programmed with separate settings for times when a given space is occupied or unoccupied.

“The facility manager can set the control system for the length of time an override lasts, and the length of time afterwards that the lights blink a warning before they go out. If a user is still there, he can press the ‘occupied’ button again. When he’s ready to leave, he can press the ‘unoccupied’ button and exit while the lights are blinking. If the last person doesn’t press the ‘unoccupied’ button before leaving, at the end of the override period the lights will go out automatically and the temperature will readjust.”

The wireless sensors also have a thumb wheel that allows occupants of a space to adjust its temperature set point between 50°F and 85°F—or at least to think that they can. The occupants may have only two or three degrees of temperature control if that’s all the flexibility the facility manager gives them.

“You can turn the wheel down to 70°F, but it may not go down to 70°F,” Kohl says. “There’s still a perception that the occupant has control, but unlike a thermostat that tells the air conditioner or furnace to go on and off, the sensor sends the information to a unit control or to a building control system that decides what to do with the information.”

Plenum-Rated Plastic
A Wireless Zone Sensor is 4.78 inches high, 2.90 inches wide, and extends only 1.08 inches out from the wall—low-profile dimensions that are architecturally compatible with those of switchplates for light switches. The device can be screwed into mounting holes in a wall, or attached with Velcro.

The sensing element inside is a thermistor, a diode that responds to variations in temperature with a change in resistance. The thermistor transmits its changes in resistance value via an analog signal to a circuit board, which reads, interprets, and converts the information into a digital signal for transmission to the receiver. The receiver then converts that digital signal back into a resistance value to control the HVAC unit

The most common receiver location is in the plenum (the space between the suspended ceiling and the structural ceiling or roof deck above) of its sensor’s room or zone, though a receiver also may be located in a basement or equipment room near its corresponding sensor.

The sensor and receiver are made of plenum-rated plastic designed for RoHs (lead-free) compliance. Because return air often travels through an egg-crate grate in the ceiling into the plenum and then back into the HVAC unit, materials potentially affecting the air in that space must be plenum-rated so they don’t give off acrid or poisonous fumes in a fire.

Wiring links the receiver to the HVAC unit it controls. Installation involves setting the receiver in place and plugging in both ends of the wire, but Trane sells fan coils and VAV boxes with a factory-installed receiver, eliminating even those steps.

Radio Transceiver
Within a typical building, the sensor’s ideal transmission range is up to 75 feet, but it may work at up to 200 feet. Its maximum obstruction-free line-of-sight range is 1,000 feet. Both the sensor and receiver are transceivers, capable of sending and receiving information. Their ability to exchange and confirm messages “makes sure the network stays robust,” Kohl explains.

They use radio frequencies in the 2.4 GHz band (based on the IEEE 802.15.4 standard), which is specifically designed for sensor networks. “It’s ideal for the application,” Kohl says. “It doesn’t convey a lot of information, but it has a long range and consumes very little power. We’ve set up the software to choose the best channel for communication with the greatest reliability and least interference with other wireless devices. The receiver listens, selects the best channel, and tells the sensor what channel to use. Then the sensor transmits on that channel.”

System users may include facility managers and maintenance staff alike.

A radio or laptop computer can’t listen in on the conversations between these sensors and their receivers, but that isn’t a problem, Kohl says. “This technology isn’t common. It doesn’t have same level of security as Wi-Fi, but it’s a totally separate system. The data it’s carrying is nothing anybody would want, unless you’re interested in the temperature of our space.”

To achieve compatibility, the sensor and receiver must have matching addresses. “We have 999 addresses available for each set,” Kohl says. “We set them with rotary switches that are easy to turn, from 0 to 9, like a combination lock. A sensor and receiver pair come with their addresses preset.”

Batteries Off The Shelf
The sensor uses two AA lithium camera batteries, available off the shelf at a local drug store or gas station. They resemble batteries for a pen flashlight, last up to five years, and cost less than $5 to replace. A pushbutton on the bottom of a sensor lets a building’s maintenance personnel test its battery’s charge and signal strength.

“Sleep mode is critical to the life of the battery,” Kohl says. “Most of the time the sensor is sleeping. Its average power draw is less than the leakage rate of the battery.”

The sensor comes with batteries installed, and its address already set to match that of the receiver. The installer pulls an insulator out from between the batteries. They automatically associate with each other, and the sensor talks to the receiver, telling it, “This is the temperature in my space.”

A sensor’s location has a great deal to do with the comfort level in its space. “The ideal location is the average, the most representative spot for any given zone,” Kohl says. “Inherently, that gives you lower temperature swings and lower consumption on the HVAC equipment side.”

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Emergency Generator
The Grand Rapids building normally runs on grid electric power from Consumers Energy Co., a subsidiary of CMS Energy Corp. in Jackson, MI. When grid power is lost, a Generac Model OE6219 emergency generator from Generac Power Systems Inc., of Waukesha, WI, automatically picks up the load for critical systems.

The 11-kW natural-gas-fired generator can run computers, telephones, emergency lighting, and the Tracer ES facility-management system that controls the building’s internal climate, but the HVAC units themselves don’t operate on backup power. “We don’t ventilate if we’re down for any length of time. That’s not a critical service,” Hubert says.

Author's Bio: George Leposky is a science and technology writer based in Miami, FL.

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