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Air source heat pumps
Heat
pumps do exactly what the name suggests. They convert low grade heat from
outside the building, in the case of air source heat pumps from the
outside ambient air, into useable grade heat inside the building.
Most peoples’ concern with air source heat pumps is that they will
fail to operate at low temperatures. The efficiency of an air source heat
pump is affected by the outside air temperature, generally, the colder the
air, the less efficient the heat pump. However, the air source units we
fit, are able to operate down to approximately -20 Celsius, at which
point it is more viable to heat with another or alternate heat source.
In
many situations the system can be set up to operate in a way that allows
use of the heat pump for most of the heating requirements, then the
alternate heat source, which may be some form of electrical immersion
heater, but could be a gas boiler, oil boiler, solar panels, solid fuel
burner etc. One of the common problems with air source heat pumps is that
people think that they could be fitted like a gas boiler, simply connected
up to a heating system, and away you go. Sadly this is not the case,
heat pumps, whether air source, or ground source work best with low
temperature heating. By this we mean primarily under- floor
heating or fan coil heaters. This is because the most efficiency is
obtained form the heat pump when it is generating low temperature output,
ideally between 40 and 50 degrees Celsius.
There are models of both air
source and ground source heat pumps coming on to the market which can
generate higher temperatures more like a traditional gas or oil boiler.
The key to successful operation of an air source heat pump is to design
the system it works with correctly. The efficiency of a heat pump is
called its coefficient of performance generally shortened to COP. The way
this is measured is how much heat a heat pump generates for each kilowatt
of electricity it uses. An average air source heat pump, connected to a
heating system which has a mix of under-floor heating and traditional
radiators will operate at an average COP over the year of 2.5 to 2.8.
This means for every kilowatt of electricity it uses, it gives out 2.5 to
2.8 kilowatts of heat. This is why heat pumps are considered a form
of micro-generation because they effectively generate heat for use at the
site they are fitted.
For a case study on an air source heat pump
installation click on
Roundcroft - Air source heat pump installation |