September-October 2009

High-IQ HVAC

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

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

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

1 Comments


The Energy Management Occupancy Sensor, which is typically placed on the ceiling, uses digital signal processing and passive infrared technology to detect motion and body heat in a room, including sensing when an occupant is sleeping. Using a wireless radio link, the sensor sends signals to an Energy Management Thermostat, which maintains occupant’s preferred temperature setting when the room is occupied. When the room is vacant, the thermostat recalculates the temperature to change as determined by the calculated recovery time. In rooms with PTACs, an Energy Management Controller works with the sensor to maintain the occupant’s preferred temperature setting and setback.

Hartmann argues that the system was a better fit for the owner than the alternative—fixed-setback systems that are activated by a door switch, not a human presence in the room. He explains that, when two people are in the room and one goes out the door, the system switches off. The preset might be 78°F in the summer and 68°F in the winter. But the fixed-setback systems do not account for thermal loads on different sides of building. On the north side, the preset temperature might be reached again quickly, but on south side, it might take 30 minutes.

Aside from the energy optimization, the NTSE had the advantage of being wireless, Hartmann adds. “[The owner] wanted wireless; they didn’t want to be pulling wires through these historical old buildings. The SmartSystem allowed global system changes due to the wireless design.”

As of April 2009, installation of the system in the 1,224 rooms in Denver and 1,840 rooms in Dallas was nearly completed. Hartmann contends that a wired system would have taken about a year, compared with the roughly three months for wireless. Getting the system operational quickly will lead to a short payback period: Hartmann reports that the systems will pay for themselves at the Sheraton Dallas in 38.6 months and in 33 months at the Denver Sheraton, which hosted the 2008 Democratic National Convention and is Colorado’s largest hotel.

Each device in the NTSE system functions as a wireless repeater, allowing the thermostats to communicate with each other and aggregate communications up to a master Telkonet Gateway Server that is located onsite. The wireless “mesh” network allows central control without the need for back-haul wiring. Every 15 minutes, the server gathers information from each thermostat in the system and aggregates data on the Telkonet network operations center databases. The system can be monitored remotely via a Web-based Telkonet Central portal, and alerts are issued indicating unusual HVAC performance.

It is also possible to generate reports to monitor system performance, such as a System Efficiency Report (rooms with above-average runtime in heat or cool mode, possibly signifying the need for cleaning or replacement) and a Savings Report (runtime hours and kilowatt hours saved on a room-by-room basis). Energy management reports can be accessed by downloading data directly from a thermostat or controller to a laptop computer. The reports contain energy cost-savings and consumption information, HVAC and PTAC runtime savings, HVAC unit efficiency, occupancy statistics, and ROI calculations.

Advertisement

Hartmann recalls that central system control paid immediate dividends for the owner. “They were excited about the centralized system, because they could actually see the savings,” he says. “As soon as we put a thermostat and a sensor in a room, it was already saving energy, but there would be no way to show it to the owners, whereas with the central control, they can physically look it up and see which rooms are on and which ones are off. Also, with the central system, we can download the data on the Web without having to walk rooms and download the data manually.”

Hartmann argues that energy optimization in a hotel is a wise investment—now more than ever. “Utilities are the second-largest cost for a hotel these days,” he says. It’s between employees and utilities, and I think it’s [nearly] a tie at this point. When you figure that hotel rooms are unoccupied pretty much all day long—people get up at 9 o’clock, or whenever, to go to their meeting or go shopping all day and come back at five—there’s no reason to heat and cool it all that time. Even in these economic times, [the Chartres Lodging Group] still committed to this system when they could have been holding this extra money. I don’t care if occupancy is down in a hotel—that’s even more of a reason to be doing this in these times. The value of a property goes up if the costs go down. Sometimes smaller owners, people who are worried about spending money, don’t tend to look at that, but you’re giving the money to the utility every month. You’re just diverting some of that money you’re diverting to the utility to an investment in the property.”


Author's Bio: Don Talend of Write Results, is a publicity and communications project manager specializing in technology and innovation.

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

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.

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get Distributed Energy Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our Distributed Energy email newsletter!