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Heat pumps have been around for a long time and, in fact, they can be found in most homes in the
developed world. Your fridge or freezer is quietly pumping heat out of the food it contains and
expelling it out from the coils at the back. Air conditioning units take heat from a building and expel
it to the outside air. The process can be reversed,however, to pump essentially free heat from the
outside environment into a house or a commercial building.
How a heat pump works
why our remote ancestors lived in caves during the Ice Age. Subterranean groundwater also tends to
be liquid even when surface water is frozen solid. It is this kind of temperature difference that is
tapped by geothermal heat pumps.
Ground heat can be utilized in several ways. The ground heat collector may be a closed loop vertical,
horizontal or radial system. Open loop systems may be employed when there is an appropriate
volume of ground water available at surface or subterranean level.
The various types of heat collector
Vertical closed loop
In a vertical closed loop system, holes are drilled into the ground, spaced16-20 feet (5-6m) apart.
The drill depth would be typically 75-500 feet(23-150m) depending on a variety of climatic and
geological factors. A pair of
linked pipes is laid in each hole, which is then filled with a special grout to
assist heat transfer between the ground and the pipe. A typical detached house requiring 10 kW (3
tons) heating capacity would require 3 boreholes. This is the most expensive geothermal system to
install but is also the most efficient,offering a rapid payback, and requires little land area for
installation.
Horizontal closed loop
In a horizontal closed loop system, interlinked pipes are laid in a trench,below the frost line, at a
depth of 4-7 feet (approx. 1-2m). A typical detachedhouse as above would require 3 loops, each 400600 feet (120-180 m) long. When the loops are placed at a shallow depth, they pick up stored
warmth from the Sun but this becomes depleted in the coldest part of the year. During long cold
winters, the ground temperature can drop considerably because of the amount of cold being dumped
by the system with no replenishment from passive solar heating, causing the heat pump to use much
more electricity than designed. This problem can be mitigated by installing the loops deeper in the
ground and/or by installing a reversible system that would also provide air conditioning during
Summer, storing heat in the ground for use in colder months. Both these options increase the initial
cost of the system but result in lower electricity bills, creating a faster return on investment.
Radial closed loop
In a radial closed loop system, the loops are laid in small-diameter boreholes drilled horizontally.
This technique, called horizontal directional drilling or HDD, enables piping to be laid under
driveways, gardens and existing structures, thereby maximizing the space available. It is an ideal
system for retrofitting in lots with existing buildings and/or other structures. The radial spokes all
return to a central hub, reducing the amount of space required. The system is slightly more
expensive than a standard horizontal closed loop system but requires much less space, making it
much more accessible to consumers in general.
Tips and criteria forchoosing your geothermal heat pump system
Although contractors may wish to minimize the size of the collection system and possibly undersize
it as a means of making the cost as attractive as possible, it is better to oversize the collection
system to some extent. This will ensure lower electricity consumption from the compressor,creating
greater energy savings and providing faster payback even though the
initial cost is a little higher for a system that covers for nasty surprises
from the weather.
For maximum energy efficiency, oversized vertical loops are usually more
cost-efficient than oversized and/or extra-deep horizontal loops and require
much less space. Radial systems offer a useful compromise between cost and space, especially in
already built-up areas or areas scheduled to be heavily built up.
A geothermal or ground-source heat pump is one of the most energy-efficient technologies available
for providing space and water heating. The systems can be built to be reversible to provide air
conditioning in summer. The installation costs are higher than for an air-air system but the efficiency
is much higher: the difference in cost is usually paid back in energy savings in from 3 to 10 years.
System life is estimated at 25 years for the inside components and more than 50 years for the
ground loop. More than a million geothermal or ground-source heat pump systems have been
installed world-wide (figure from a survey in 2004) and the figure is growing by around 10% a year.
Recent determination of the amount of additional heat (ca. 20%)provided by the low-level
radioactivity in granite would tend to make avertical loop system installed in granite bedrock even
more cost-efficient(see Granite may extend the range of geothermal energy use).
When installing any new or upgraded heating or cooling system,it is always advisable to ensure that
the relevant space is correctlyinsulated.
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