1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a duct type air conditioning system (AC system), which is capable of energy efficiently regulating temperature in each room (or zone) independently as well as providing other air conditioning functions such as humidifying, cleaning and filtering air in each room independently.
2. Background Information
In most residential houses, one or more central HVACs (heating, ventilation and air-conditioning) are used to send conditioned air to designated rooms. Usually, one thermostat controls the temperature of several rooms or zones. Due to differences in ventilation efficiency and exterior thermal load among different zones, not all zones can achieve the temperature set at the single thermostat control. It is common that rooms on the upper floor have much higher temperature in the summer than rooms in lower floor. In winter, rooms in northwest corner or above the garage of a house usually have lower temperatures than other rooms. With a single thermostat, occupants in different zones cannot select their own comfort level.
Moreover, for a zone where the thermostat is not located to reach a certain level, all other zones have to rise or fall at the same time. This is a great waste of energy. Therefore, it is highly desirable that the temperature and possibly other air comfort and quality measures in each zone can be controlled individually.
These solutions, however, are usually complex and expensive and thus hard to justify from cost saving point of view. For example, the solutions by Parker et al. (U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,530,395, 4,646,964, 4,931,948) require dampers fitted inside ducts, thus incurring high installation and maintenance costs. Ho et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 5,833,134) use dampers in registers to control airflows, but the design calls for the register dampers to be manually controlled, thus barring the possibility of automatic zone temperature control. Hampton et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 5,271,558) require turbines be placed in the register and the turbines be connected to power generators. Their invention does not have coordination among zone thermostats either. The current invention presents a simple and inexpensive individual-zone controlled HVAC system.
This invention provides a system capable of regulating temperature (and/or humidity, air quality, etc.) in each zone independently, which can be incorporated into a new AC system as well as be added on to an existing AC system with low cost and easy installation. The system comprises a HVAC unit that supplies conditioned air; a central controller that controls the HVAC unit and coordinates with the control unit in each zone; a zone controller in every zone to control the zone air flow rate regulating devices, which could be dampers, air blowers (boosters) or the combination of dampers and boosters, and send zone data to central controller; air flow rate regulating devices such as battery powered dampers on registers (with and without an air blower that may require additional power) and/or air blowers in every zone to regulate the flow rate of conditioned air; and use of intelligent digital wireless communication network to connect all components of the system listed above. This system avoids the need of extensive wiring and large-scale modification on the existing ductwork of a building to realize independent zone climate control.
Central control unit has multiple functions. It coordinates the zone control units, controls the HVAC unit and may also function as a zone controller that controls the airflow rate regulating devices in the zone where the central controller is located. After the zones have reached the preset conditions, the central controller shuts down the HVAC unit.
The central control unit controls whether the system is in a heating, cooling or ventilation state. The room (zone) controller detects the state in the corresponding room and act accordingly. For example, consider a situation where a room control unit sets the room temperature to be 70° F. and the actual room temperature is 65° F. If the central control unit sets the state as cooling, the room control unit will close the dampers and/or stop the boosters, so the cooling air from the duct will not enter the room. On the other hand, if the central control unit is in the heating state, the room control unit will open the dampers and/or start the boosters. When the central controller sets the system state to be ventilation, all dampers will usually be kept in an open status.
The control units contain microprocessors and can be programmed to deliver sophisticated and concerted functions. For example, the degree of openness of a damper and the speed of the fans in the boosters can be programmed as a function of the speed of temperature change and the difference between the set and actual temperatures in the zone, in order for zones to reach the set temperature simultaneously. Battery is preferably used to supply power to the central and zone control units.
The status of a damper and/or booster is controlled by the central and zone control units to regulate flow rate of conditioned air into each zone. In the simplest case, the damper can just assume two statuses, open and closed, the booster can also have only two states: on and off, if a booster is incorporated into the system. In a more sophisticated case, a damper can assume any status between being complete open and complete closed, and an algorithm can be programmed to make the degree of openness of a damper to be a function of temperature difference between the actual and set temperature of the zone; the status/performance of the boosters can also be adjusted accordingly. In the most sophisticated case, the central control unit and zone control units work together to control the status of dampers and the status/performance of the boosters in all zones in order to achieve the set conditions in every zone in the most efficient manner. As the control units are programmable, the control algorithm can be set at installation and changed when needed later.
As there are usually multiple zones in a building, it is important there is no communication interference between control unit in one zone and airflow rate regulating devices in another. There are many well know methods to address this issue. Various means are available to pair zone control units and their corresponding air flow rate regulating devices (powered wireless registers). For example, every component can be assigned a unique network address in the wireless network composed of the HVAC unit, the central controller, zone controller and air flow rate regulating devices. A standard network communication protocol can be used to carry messages between the network components without possibility of interference/miscommunication. For example, one means is to pair a zone controller and its zone air flow rate regulating device by registering the air flow rate regulating device to the zone controller through a initial “talk” at time of installation.
The powered dampers in this invention are built into a register, which is the piece that covers the exit of a duct into a zone. Registers can easily be removed and exchanged without having to tear open the ducts. This feature in combination with the wireless communication feature makes the invention easy to install and maintain. A communication unit on the damper receives instructions from its zone controller and sends commands to a mechanism that controls the status of the damper utilizing motor or other suitable electro-magnetic device.
The boosters in this invention can also be built into a register, which is the piece that covers the exit of a duct into a zone. Fans are added to the registers. The boosters utilize the fan to boost the airflow rate. This feature in combination with the wireless communication feature makes the invention easy to install and maintain. The registers equipped with boosters can also have dampers on their covers. A communication unit on the booster receives instruction from its zone controller and sends commands to a mechanism that controls the status of the booster. In this case, battery power may not be sufficient. An external AC or DC power source can be used.
Battery can be used to supply power to all electrical components on a damper. Low power consumption circuits and components make it possible for the batteries to last a long time. However, battery level detection function can be built in. The damper battery level can be checked regularly. Varieties of well known methods can be used to check the battery level. If battery level is deemed lower, a signal or sign can be displayed on the zone controller or on the damper.
There can be a manual override for the airflow regulating device status on the zone controller. When the manual override is engaged, the zone controller set the airflow-regulating device in a certain status until the override mode is revoked.
Closing registers will usually reduce total airflow volume. Too little airflow may have adverse effect on the HVAC unit, such as icing or overheating. A temperature sensor can be placed inside or on the duct wall nearest to the heat exchange component of the central HVAC unit. The sensor sends measured temperature to the central control unit. If freezing or over heating situation is detected, the central control unit could change the heating or cooling operation into ventilation operation.
Too low airflow volume may also result in unacceptable airflow pressure in the HVAC unit and the ducts. To ensure the airflow volume is acceptable, a number of means can be employed, including keeping certain registers always open, using booster fans, allowing a certain amount of airflow even when a register is closed, setting zone dead band according to degree of temperature fluctuation in the zone, using a pressure sensor in the HVAC unit or the ducts to prevent too low airflow volume etc. One example is to set a minimal number of the dampers that need to be always open. Another example is allowing the damper to cover only partial duct even in fully closed position. A third example is to allow three status of the damper: fully open, partially open and fully closed (damper fully covers the exit of the duct in its fully close status); algorithms can be applied to dynamically control these dampers to keep certain flow rate while having maximal independent climate control and energy saving effects.
For many homes, it is safe to use dampers described above as the only airflow rate regulating device in the system. However, some homes have ducts poorly constructed, which have too low flow rate even in normal operating condition (single zone). Using dampers only in these homes to achieve multi-zoning may result in unacceptable low flow rate and therefore may cause problems to the central HVAC unit. For these homes, the boosters described above or the combination of boosters and dampers above is the preferred airflow rate regulating devices.
The invention described in above summary is further explained with the following drawings that illustrate specific embodiments of the invention.
The following detailed description is provided as an aid to those desiring to practice the invention disclosed herein, it is not, however, to be construed as limiting to the instant invention as claimed, since those of ordinary skill in the art will readily understand that variations can be made in the examples, procedures, methods and devices disclosed herein, without departing from the spirit or scope of the instant invention. As such the present invention is only limited by the scope of the claims appended hereto and the equivalents encompassed thereby.
In
A preferred embodiment of the zone controller is shown in
Components on a powered wireless adjustable damper embodied here are shown in
Table 1 tabulates an example for the logic a zone controller employs to control the register status. The symbol Δ represents the dead band, which is the preset tolerance range on temperature before damper status is changed. The tolerance range for different zones can be set to different values. For example, if there is a zone that is more demanding than other zones in the sense that it is usually the last to reach the set temperature and the first to activate the HVAC unit, the tolerance range Δ for this zone could be set the largest to avoid frequent turning on and off of the HVAC unit.
The booster can be a powered adjustable register depicted in
The powered damper part may not necessarily be included. A wireless signal transceiver 41 communicates with the zone controller and sends control signal to motor 39, which controls fan 38 through certain mechanism. Fan 39 is mounted on the walls of the booster through thin metal rods 40. Screen 37 protects the fan and diffuse airflow. Power is brought to the booster through electrical wire 42. Since the booster fans themselves serve as dampers when not operating, a blade damper may or may not be needed.
A HVAC unit operates most efficiently in certain airflow/air pressure range. Too little airflow may cause overheating or icing. There are many means to prevent this from happening, some of which are listed below:
In practice, a combination of the above measures can be used. For example, a simple means would be to keep 20% of registers always open and use boosters in 20% of the remaining registers.
Wireless communication system is needed to transmit information between the central (main) control unit, sub (zone) control units and vent units (registers). A digital wireless communication system is designed to have very low manufacturing cost, reliable communication at relatively low data rate. A design example is illustrated as the following:
The present application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) to U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/424,673, filed on Nov. 7, 2002, which provisional application is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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