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CH-18-006 -- Commissioning an Existing Heat Recovery Chiller System at a Large District Plant

M00001743

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CH-18-006 -- Commissioning an Existing Heat Recovery Chiller System at a Large District Plant

Conference Proceeding by ASHRAE, 2018

Lei Wang, PhD, PE; Yasuko Sakurai, Dr Eng; Steven J. Bowman; David E. Claridge, PhD, PE, PCC

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A heat recovery chiller provides heating hot water tobuildings by using recovered heat from the chiller, which is efficient and cost-effective. However, not every central plant is an appropriate application for heat recovery chillers because coincident heating hot-water and chilled-water loads are required. Most previous studies on applications of heat recovery chillers have focused on techniques for optimal design of a utility plant with heat recovery chillers. There are very few guidelines for operators on how to run a heat recovery chillersystem efficiently at different operating conditions. Factorsinclude electricity demand charges and rate structure, heating hot-water supply temperature, heating hot-water loop delta-T degeneration, chilled-water loop delta-T degeneration, andthe performance of other variable-speed drive chillers in the plant, which all affect operational efficiency. This paper presents several commissioning measures for a heat recovery chiller application at a large district plant in central Texas. Theon-site measured data from the building automation system(BAS) is used to develop a regression model to evaluate the savings potential for each measure. The current operating strategy saves $270,375/year compared to a baseline chiller without heat recovery, but the proposed control strategies would improve the savings to $389,182/year at current utility prices, or 43.9% more savings than the current control strategy. Although these savings are based on a case-study project, the methodology and control strategies can be applied to optimize other heat recovery chiller applications.

Citation: 2018 Winter Conference, Chicago, IL, Technical Papers