Technical Papers
Jul 13, 2017

Airside System–Type Prediction Enabled by Intelligent Pressure Independent Control Valves

Publication: Journal of Architectural Engineering
Volume 23, Issue 3

Abstract

Low delta T syndrome, that is, the operation at low differences between supply and return chilled-water temperatures, increases the energy consumption of chilled-water systems. Numerous causes of low delta T lie at the cooling coils. As the load on the coil increases, more chilled water is sent through it. A point of saturation is reached when significant increases in chilled-water flow result in negligible increases in provided cooling power. The ability to recognize when such saturation is occurring and restrict flow in such situations is needed to combat low delta T. An intelligent pressure independent control valve attempts this by measuring and logging inlet and outlet water temperatures and water flow rates. Through nonlinear regression of measured coil data, a novel approach for the valve to predict saturation was developed and tested. The resulting curve fit was then used to predict whether a coil was operating in a constant- or variable-air-volume system. In total, 128 test coils over four climates and various system characteristics showed a 79.7% correct prediction rate.

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Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to Journal of Architectural Engineering
Journal of Architectural Engineering
Volume 23Issue 3September 2017

History

Received: Jul 20, 2016
Accepted: Mar 8, 2017
Published online: Jul 13, 2017
Published in print: Sep 1, 2017
Discussion open until: Dec 13, 2017

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Authors

Affiliations

Miles H. Ryan [email protected]
P.E.
Instructor, Dept. of Engineering Applications, Air Force Institute of Technology, Wright-Patterson AFB, Greene County, OH 45433 (corresponding author). E-mail: [email protected]
Gregor P. Henze, Ph.D.
P.E.
Professor, Dept. of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering, Univ. of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309.

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