September-October 2009

High-IQ HVAC

Intelligent control and monitoring systems allow facility owners to optimize energy use and achieve quick ROI.

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Photo: Optimum Energy LLC
The Mineta San José International Airport is undergoing an upgrade to one terminal and construction of another, and receiving HVAC system improvements with the aid of a Web-based monitoring system.

By Don Talend

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Ostermiller adds that the platform allows energy optimization using occupancy sensors. “The temperature is controlled within a range. In the previous systems, the teacher or user could crank the heat up as high as they wanted to or crank the air conditioning down as low as they wanted to in a particular space. But with the central control system, we’re able to set the temperature and control it within a 4- or 5-degree range. The user still has the ability to control the temperature within that range, but the user can’t turn the temperature way down or way up and just leave it like that once a space is unoccupied.” He also says that variable refrigerant volume (VRV) systems are being used in several schools; the VRV systems utilize several fan units within individual rooms that are connected to one variable-speed condenser, saving more energy.

An important upgrade has been in the lighting systems, Ostermiller adds. “Most of our schools, especially the older ones, had T12 fixtures and regular ballasts, and we’ve changed them out to the [reportedly 40%] more efficient T8 fixtures with the electronic ballasts. And, we’ve put motion sensors on all of the lighting, too, so when spaces are unoccupied, the lights go off. That’s where our biggest energy savings have come from, and it gives us the funding to do the HVAC upgrade.”

The increased energy efficiency is yielding environmental benefits, too: to date, emissions have been reduced by 6,231,885 pounds of CO2, 53,093 pounds of nitrogen oxide and 197,660 pounds of sulfur dioxide.

Yet another upgrade to the HVAC systems has been the use of a chemical-free Flozone system used to treat water used in the cooling towers in the chiller plants serving the HVAC systems. Whittington reports that the system reduces scaling in the cooling towers, can be remotely monitored, and is already saving more than 24 million gallons of potable water per year.

Hotel Room Occupancy Adjustments
The needs of reducing burdensome energy costs, getting new system infrastructure installed quickly, and achieving a rapid payback were paramount when the Chartres Lodging Group recently upgraded the HVAC systems at its Sheraton Dallas and Sheraton Denver properties. The new system optimizes energy use by adjusting for room occupancy. At each location, the payback will be about three years.

The group sought the HVAC upgrade because it wanted to make the hotels as sustainable as possible amid budgetary limitations and achieve a reasonable payback on the investment. The energy costs in operating the hotels were significant: For example, the cost was about $800,000 per month during the summer in Dallas, according to Troy Hartmann, president of San Diego-based Pacific Energy Service and Facilities Inc., which installed the Networked Telkonet SmartEnergy (NTSE) energy management system in both locations over about three months, starting in the first quarter of 2009.

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The NTSE platform utilizes wireless ZigBee IEE802.15.4 mesh technology and links Telkonet’s Energy Management Occupancy Sensors and thermostats or packaged terminal air conditioner (PTAC) controllers, and existing Internet/intranet infrastructures for rapid, retrofit installation without the need for back-haul wiring. The link between the sensors and thermostats is critical to the system’s ability to optimize energy use.

The system maintains a default or guest-selected temperature when a room is occupied. The Energy Management Occupancy Sensor determines when a room is unoccupied and adjusts the temperature using Recovery Time (RT) technology. The RT continuously performs calculations that evaluate how far each room’s temperature can drift from the occupant’s preferred setting by taking into consideration various environmental factors, such as the preferred setting, the location of the room within the building, window placement relative to sun or shade, humidity, variations in weather throughout the day, and age and condition of HVAC equipment. The NTSE is designed to better optimize energy use compared with fixed systems, which establish a setback temperature at one fixed temperature or increase or decrease the temperature by a fixed deviation. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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LeeBristol

October 6th, 2009 11:14 AM PT

Does anyone have any experience with DC variable speed HVAC equipment? We, Standard Solar, are trying to mate solar PV systems with high efficiency DC HVAC motors, fans, etc.

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