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Posted By: davidfreeboroughPosted By: qeiplWhy would you invest in expensive machinery just to warm incoming air?Because its cheaper to run & saves CO2 emissions.
David

Posted By: qeiplA passive stack extractor will draw fresh air into the building, which will be warmed by the energy in the building.Cooling the building in exactly the same way as an exhaust heat pump.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenCan anyone with an EAHP and a thermometer, tell us what temperature it is actually discharging the exhaust air at?
Posted By: SteamyTeaI would love to see some data from both systems to get to the bottom of this.
Posted By: davidfreeboroughPosted By: qeiplA passive stack extractor will draw fresh air into the building, which will be warmed by the energy in the building.Cooling the building in exactly the same way as an exhaust heat pump.
David
Posted By: WillInAberdeen
Can anyone with an EAHP and a thermometer, tell us what temperature it is actually discharging the exhaust air at?
Posted By: qeiplPosted By: davidfreeboroughCooling the building in exactly the same way as an exhaust heat pump.
No! There's no heat loss at the intake end of the ventilation process.
All of the heat loss is at the extraction end.
Posted By: djhIt's 'really' just the second order term in a power series expansion of the (relativistic) mass of the object.
Posted By: qeiplDespite David's protestations the Ecocent is doing the same job as the MVHR.That is not what I said. I said that an exhaust heat pump should not be routninely specified for domestic installations because it consumes a lot more energy & produces a lot more CO2 than an MVHR doing the same job, i.e. heating the cold incoming air up to room temperature.
Both of them scavenge heat from the outgoing air.
Both of them use this to heat the air that comes into the building. the fact that the MVHR unit heats the air at the point of entry is irrelevant.
Posted By: WillInAberdeendid I understand right that an EAHP should cool the outgoing exhaust air, to a temperature much lower than the ambient air that is being drawn in to replace the exhaust air, thus producing a net energy gain which can be used for DHW/UFH?Some are capable of doing this. However, you still consume a lot more energy delivering the proportion of the energy recovered by reducing the exhaust air temperature to outside air temperature than an MVHR would doing the same job. So a better approach would be to fit the exhaust heat pump to an MVHR exhaust. However, this would still be limited in power terms by the air flow rate & you'd probably be better placing it outside where the air flow rate is unlimited.
Posted By: davidfreeboroughI said that an exhaust heat pump should not be routninely specified for domestic installations because it consumes a lot more energy & produces a lot more CO2 than an MVHR doing the same job, i.e. heating the cold incoming air up to room temperature.
Posted By: davidfreeboroughThe exhaust heat pump only adds energy to the house because you're using electricity to run the compressor & recover energy from the extracted air.
However, you can add that energy far more cheaply using an MVHR with a gas boiler or external ASHP.
I'm running the heat pump to extract energy from the outside air that's being drawn through the house in exactly the same way as an external ASHP.
Posted By: qeiplI'm not running the heat pump to extract energy from the ventilation air. I'm running the heat pump to extract energy from the outside air that's being drawn through the house in exactly the same way as an external ASHP. They both use the same air.If the exhaust heat pump exhaust is at outside air temperature then you've not extracted any energy from the outside air. All the energy you've extracted is coming from the house. If the exhaust heat pump exhaust is below outside air temperature then that proportion of the energy is coming from outside, but you're still paying a lot more than you need to recover the rest of it. You stated earlier that you believed the Ecocent exhaust temperature is within a degree or two of outside air temperature, so in your case, I don't believe you're extracting any energy from the outside air.
Post some numbers which show how an exhaust heat pump is cheaper to run than an MVHR plus ASHP or gas boiler & I'd be happy to review them.However, you can add that energy far more cheaply using an MVHR with a gas boiler or external ASHP.Only if the external ASHP (or boiler) + MVHR fans use less energy to do the same amount of work (heating water and ventilating) as the exhaust ASHP. The reverse is more likely to be true.
Posted By: davidfreeboroughAttached is a comparison of:
1. An exhaust heat pump with a COP of 4;
2. An MVHR with an efficiency of 90% & an external ASHP with a COP of 3.
The results ...
Posted By: ChrisEnglandAlso, not sure why you include fan power there, nor why the ASHP COP doesn't drop with external air temp.I've used a COP of 4 for the exhaust heat pump & a COP of 3 for the external ASHP to reflect the lower temperature of the external ASHP's air intake.
Also not sure what the Net Heat gain bit on the MHVR + ASHP column is - or at least why it's there.
Sorry, been an idiot - I see your using the EAHP power as input to eg hot water and calling it net heat gain, which is also why the COP seems wrong.
Posted By: ChrisEnglandMany thanks - guess it depends on what you count as input for the COPI'm using the standard definition of COP, I'm just starting the calculation in an unusual place because I'm starting from the air flow & the temperature difference between the inside air & the exhaust air. It's important to start from the air flow because with an exhaust heat pump this determines the ventilation heat loss.
Posted By: ChrisEnglandthere is an implicit assumption in the MVHR+ASHP case that the house is airtight. If you add an 'uncontrolled' ventilation rate, then matters change somewhat - for example, adding a leakage rate of 0.4 ach, ie equalling your MVHR, then the numbers for MVHR+ASHP and EAHP come out roughly the same.The heat loss due to air leakage is additional to that due to deliberate ventilation. It needs to be separately accounted for in both the exhaust heat pump & MVHR + ASHP cases.
Posted By: davidfreeboroughA heat pump with a COP of 4 gets three quarters of its power from the air flow & one quarter ....