Ingram's Water and Air Equipment
  

HVAC Product Locator Geothermal Heat Pump More Efficient?

Posted: January 23rd, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: HVAC | Tags: , , , , | No Comments »

  

HVAC Heating Your Home With Geothermal Energy

HVAC (heating, ventilation, air condtioning unit) Geothermal heat pumps provide the most earth-friendly home heating and cooling system available. Installing a geothermal heatpump system, you’re investing in a naural heating souce that will uses less energy, provide for our childens future as it keeps the air clean and fresh. It emits zero pollutants, in your home, and provides cost effecting heating.

During the heating season, according to EEER ( gov energy ) a ground-source heat pump supplies three to four units of heat to your home for every unit of electrical energy required to operate the system. So you get two to three kilowatt hours (kWh) of free energy for every one kWh of electrical energy you pay for. In other words, a ground-source heat pump is 300% to 400% efficient.

Don’t forget the tax incentives when you install a geothermal heat pump system.

Geothermal heat pumps are like standard heat pumps, but use the ground rather than outside air to provide heating, air conditioning and, often hot water.

As they use the earth’s natural heat, they are among the most productive and comfortable heating and cooling technologies now available.
Energy star geothermal heat pumps state that ENERGY STAR qualified geothermal heat pumps use about 30% less energy than a standard heat pump.
They are quieter than conventional systems. Very reliable 95-98%

In the winter the normal heat pump system extracts heat from outdoor air and transfers it inside where it is circulated through your home’s ductwork by a fan.

Even cold air contains a great deal of heat; the temperature at which air no longer carries any heat is well below -200 degrees Fahrenheit. That is not too common an occurace.

How Does Geothermal Energy Work?

How does geothermal energy work is a good question, and one which I have often been asked. In this article I must first explain what it is, and then how it can be made to work for man.

Geothermal energy is, literally, the heat of the earth. The heat itself derives from radioactive decay beneath the earth’s surface and, in certain locations, it is concentrated enough and is close enough to surface waters to be brought to the surface by local geological features.

Geo-energy was once thought of as nothing but a thing to wonder at, but it is thought of very differently, now, and is considered by many as one of the most promising forms of renewable energy. It is a renewable energy source because the hot water which conveys it is replenished by rainfall and the heat it brings with it is continuously produced inside the earth.

The great thing about it is that as a form of energy it is versatile and reliable and it produces electricity which generally produces none of the greenhouse gases associated with the combustion of fossil fuels.

So, geothermal energy is the power which can be generated by the harnessing of the heat beneath the Earth’s surface. Deep wells are usually used to pipe steam and hot water from deep within the Earth, up to the surface.

Geothermal heat comes from the magma in the earth’s core, and that itself is heated by the radioactive decay of uranium, thorium, and potassium present in the core. Geothermal energy is present everywhere beneath the Earth’s surface, although the highest temperature, and thus the most desirable, resources are concentrated in regions of active or geologically young volcanoes.

Though the resource is thermal energy rather than a physical substance such as gold or coal, many aspects of geothermal energy are analogous to characteristics of mineral and fossil-fuel resources.

Geothermal energy works for us when, for example, is used as to warm the water in fishing farms. The water is heated, and the warmth makes it more possible for alligators, tropical fish, and other types of fish to grow in seasons and places where they wouldn’t normally.

There are some limitations to it as a form of energy. Unfortunately, the best geothermal resources are concentrated in areas of volcanic activity and are not widely distributed. The earth’s centre is a distance of approximately 4000 miles from the surface and is so hot that it is molten, but when the heat does not rise to the surface it is too far to drill down to the center.

When used in a power station geothermal heat from the hot water from the well causes a ‘secondary fluid’ to turn into vapor, which as it expands drives the turbines to produce electricity. Since the technology used in a binary-cycle geothermal power plant is a closed-loop system, nothing is emitted to the atmosphere. After turning the turbine generator, the working fluid is condensed back into liquid, which is repeatedly vaporized by the geothermal heat in a continuing cycle.

Dry steam and flash steam power plants do emit low levels of carbon dioxide, nitric oxide, and sulfur, although reportedly at only roughly 5% of the levels emitted by fossil fuel power plants. However, geothermal plants can be built with emissions-controlling systems that can inject these substances back into the earth, thereby reducing carbon emissions reportedly to less than 0.1% of those from fossil fuel power plants.

Dry steam plants are used when the rock is very hot. They take steam out of fractures in the ground and use it to directly drive a turbine that spins a generator. Flash plants take hot water, usually under pressure and at temperatures over twice the normal boiling point of water, out of the ground. They allow it to boil as it rises to the surface then separates the steam phase in steam/water separators and then run the steam through a turbine. The turbine also turns a generator, and from that comes the electrical power.

Temperatures in the Central Texas hydrothermal aquifers range from about 90 degrees Fahrenheit to 160 degrees F at depths from 500 to 5,000 feet. Historically these waters have seen some application in spas and therapeutic baths, but might also be developed for geothermal winter heating if used with heat pumps.

If you were to ask the average Icelander; ‘How Does Geothermal Energy Work’. He would probably say; ‘very reliably’ and, ‘our country shows how it can work very well’.

Iceland takes advantage of its incredible geological structure to use geothermal power to their advantage. Recently, it has been reported that 17% of Iceland’s total electricity production comes from geothermal energy. Iceland has reached uniquely high levels in the utilization of geothermal energy, but the resource could be better utilized globally. Iceland is very lucky when it comes to energy as it gets almost all of the rest of its electricity from Hydro-power dams.

Energy from geothermal sources today has been said to amount to less than 0.1 percent of the global world use.

Currently in the US, the author understands that, only four states generate electricity from geothermal resources. In total, this provides electricity for about 3.7 million people.

By: Steve Evans

Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

Steve Evans likes to answer questions like; How Do You Save on Gas?. He also explains what a Biogas Digester is.

explain geothermal heat pumps,

Heat from the Underground
Heat from the Underground. Geothermal heat pumps use natural thermal energy

Ground Source Heat Pump
As its name suggests, this system utilizes two wells and underground water.

Geothermal Heat Pumps
That happens to be an extremely efficient operating temperature for heat pumps

Geothermal Heat Pumps
Geothermal heat pumps are one of the most efficient ways to heat and cool a home .

Geothermal Heat Pump Efficient

Highly efficient geothermal

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , ,


HVAC Discover the Benefits Of Geothermal Heat Pumps

Posted: January 20th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: HVAC | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

HVAC Discover the Benefits Of Geothermal Heat Pumps

geothermal heatpumps, ground source heat pump


Discovering the benefits of geothermal heatpump systems , is very exiting to anyone who is looking for to lower their utility bill, have a clean source of energy, and is environmentally conscience. Geothermal heat pumps tap into the earth just a few feet underground, to produce clean efficient energy that is completely under utilized. Geotheramal heat pumps are reliable, and unlike oil we will never run out of it.

florida heat pump geothermal, geothermal heat pump system

The Benefits Of Geothermal Heat Pumps

A Geothermal Heat Pump (GHP) is an apparatus that extracts heat from below the surface of earth. It works on the principle that heat flows from higher temperature substances to lower temperature substances via conduction or via convection (air currents). Geothermal Heat Pumps take in heat from the earth or water bodies to provide space and water heating. This works since the earth traps nearly half the sun’s energy that is received by the earth.

Ground source heating and cooling will give great comfort and be cost-effective with environmentally-friendly technology which uses our planet’s ability to store energy as heat. Geothermal heat pump systems move the heat from Earth or from water into buildings, or from buildings right back into Earth. A little bit of electricity is employed for operating fans, pumps, controls, and a little compressor.

GHPs utilize the relatively constant temperature of the ground or water several feet below the surface as a source of heating and cooling and are appropriate for both retrofit or new homes. In addition to space heating and cooling, geothermal heat pumps can provide hot water with virtually no additional energy requirements because GHPs don’t create heat; they merely move it from one area to another.

This is a relatively new technology that can save homeowners money
Although the initial cost of a new geothermal system is generally more expensive than a traditional heating and cooling system, the extra investment is returned within five to ten years. The ground loop piping is estimated to last over fifty years, and even the internal parts have about a 25 year life span. Every year about 50,000 new geothermal heating systems are added in the United States. They’re very reasonable for most areas and can use the Earth for heating when temperatures drop and as a heat sink when it’s hot outside.

Quite a number of new residential systems come with desuperheaters, by which excess heat is transferred to the home’s hot water storage tank from the geothermal heat pump’s compressor, providing a highly efficient means of heating water. But in the spring and autumn, during which the geothermal heat pump system does not operate, the desuperheater will not provide hot water. However, because of the geothermal system’s significant advantage in efficiency compared to other water heating methods, ‘full demand’ systems using a separate heat exchanger to meet hot water needs cost-effectively are now being offered by some manufacturers.

By: Ryan McCall..

Article Directory : http://www.articledashboard.com

Even though the cost of installation of Geothermal Heating Systems can be several times that of traditional heating and cooling systems, the additional costs are returned in energy savings in 5 to 10 years. This is because of the very high efficiency of Geothermal Heat Pumps .

bad things about geothermal heat pumps

Geothermal Heat Pumps
What are the Benefits of Geothermal Heat Pump?

Geothermal Heat Pump Systems
A short spot on the benefits of geothermal heating & cooling.

Geothermal Energy
Geothermal Energy sources, geothermal heatpump benefits.

Geothermal Heat Pumps
Geothermal heat pumps are one of the most efficient ways to heat and cool a home .

Geothermal Heat Pump

Highly efficient geothermal

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,