This application relates to a control for a heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) system wherein the control takes in demands from several zones, and determines which of several capacity stages are appropriate given the existing demands. In particular, the present inventive control better meets the demand in that it considers the existence of demand over time in determining whether to change the stage.
HVAC controls are becoming more sophisticated. A basic HVAC control is operable to take in a requested temperature, and compare a requested temperature, or set point, to an actual temperature. The difference is known as the demand. A control then controls the heating or cooling equipment to meet that demand.
More sophisticated systems have several zones, each of which may have an individual demand. As an example, several rooms within a building may each have a set point control that allows a user to select a desired temperature for that particular zone. Each zone may have a sensor to sense the actual temperature. The difference between the desired temperature, or set point, and the actual temperature is known as the zone demand. The demands from the several zones are sent to a control, and the control evaluates how to meet those several demands.
One other feature of modern HVAC systems is that the heating or cooling equipment has several available capacity stages. To ensure the most efficient operation, the control would tend to operate the heating or cooling equipment in the lowest stage that can adequately meet the demand. As the demand increases, then the stage would also increase. Examples of stages might be a furnace provided with several optional heating elements, or an air conditioning system that can be operated in several different capacity modes.
In the prior art, a control for determining the recommended stage looks at a variable known as the system demand. In this prior art control, the system demand is taken from the various zone demands across the system, and calculated utilizing a particular formula. The system demand is considered by a stage control algorithm that selects a desired stage based upon the system demand. The stage control algorithm takes the system demand and multiplies it by some multiplier. The output of this multiplication is a requested stage number. Thus, as the system demand increases, the indicated stage would also increase.
This known control is well suited for low load operations, and when operating at low stages. However, the known control has the potential problem of allowing “droop.” Droop occurs when the system is unable to fully meet the demand, but is within a degree or two of the set points. Particularly when operating at a high stage with the known control, a few degrees difference may never be sufficient to move into the next higher stage operation. Thus, the system can operate for long periods of time without ever fully meeting the demand. It would be desirable to provide a stage control algorithm that is better suited for actually meeting the demand.
One simple HVAC system does include a control for determining a recommended stage that looks not only to a current demand, but also to the existence of a demand over time, or the integral of the demand. This control, however, has not been associated with a multiple zone HVAC system. Instead, the known control only provided a control in a single zone system.
In a disclosed embodiment of this invention, the stage control algorithm for determining a staging demand incorporates a quantity indicative of the amount of demand over time. Stated mathematically, an integral of the demand is considered in the stage control algorithm.
In one embodiment, the staging demand is determined by a stage control algorithm that multiplies the system demand by one multiplier, and takes the cumulative sum of system demands over some period of time and multiplies that sum by another multiplier. With this stage control algorithm, the problem of droop is avoided in that a demand existing over a period of time, provides sufficient weighting to move the staging demand to higher stages.
One other feature that is modified by this invention from the prior art control is the way the system demand is calculated. The prior art system demand took the totality of system demands across the zone, and further the highest positive demand for any one zone and utilized the formula to calculate the system demand. Since the present invention is utilizing the integral of the system demands over time, there is the possibility of both positive and negative system demands. Thus, the present invention utilizes a system demand formula which weights the greatest absolute value zone demand.
Further, while in the disclosed embodiment, the consolidation of the several zone demands occurs prior to taking the integral, it is also possible that the integral is taken on the individual zone demands, with the current and integral signals for each zone then being consolidated. However, applicant believes this may be the more challenging approach, and thus utilizes the consolidated signal as the term that is used in the integral calculation in the disclosed embodiment.
These and other features of the present invention can be best understood from the following specification and drawings, the following of which is a brief description.
An HVAC system control 10 is illustrated in
When the system is “on” or conditioning air, the zones that are incorporated into the control include all zones with a damper that is at least partially open. When the system is in an “off” mode, or not conditioning air, then all zones having a demand are utilized in this calculation.
At step 22, the zone demands are consolidated into a system demand. In the prior art, system demand was taken from the demands from the zone, with a weighted increase for the greatest positive zone demand. A “positive” zone demand would be where the actual temperature is below the set point in heating mode, or wherein the actual temperature is above the set point in a cooling mode. The formula used was as follows:
System Demand=[(the sum of demands from zones which have demand)/(the number of zones having demand)+(the greatest zone demand)]/2.
This system demand is then sent to a control step 23 for determining the stages requested, or the staging demand.
The stage control algorithm for determining staging demand in the prior art simply applies a multiplier to the system demand. The actual prior art control utilizes a multiplier of 2, with a hysteresis of one stage. The result is that a first stage of equipment is turned on with 0.5 degree weighted average error and turned off when the weighted average error is zero.
As shown in
The present invention addresses this problem by considering system demands over time in determining a staging demand.
In one embodiment, the staging demand is determined as follows:
Since there would be 60 of the system demands taken into the cumulative sum number per hour, the total multiplier is effectively 2.5 of the average system demand over that time.
Of course, other multipliers can be utilized, and other time periods, both longer or shorter, can be utilized in the integral portion. As shown in
With the use of an integral term, over-conditioning should allow the integral term to move negatively. Since the prior art control only turned the equipment on to a higher stage when a sufficiently large demand existed, and turned it off when the demand went to zero, a negative demand was not a problem. However, when the integral term is used, the system demand must average to zero (so that the integral term will be constant), to keep the staging demand constant. This means the system demand should be allowed to become either positive or negative. The prior art system demand, which weighted the zone with the greatest positive zone demand, is no longer best suited for this control.
The prior art system demand formula was calculated as follows:
As the system moves towards a stage down point, the “greatest positive zone demand” is most likely a small positive demand whereas a much larger negative demand would exist elsewhere. Yet, in the prior art formula, the small positive demand was the most heavily weighted.
With the present invention, the system demand is changed to the following:
System Demand=[(the sum of demands from zones which have demand)/(the number of zones having demand)+{the greatest zone demand}]/2.
The quantity in the { } is intended to mean the zone demand which has the largest absolute value. Thus, as the system approaches turn off, the output of the above equation snaps negatively when the largest negative zone demand just exceeds the largest positive zone demand. When passed through the staging calculation, the first (proportional) term of the staging demand would also cause the staging signal to snap negatively. Thus, staging down normally occurs when the largest positive zone demand just equals that of the most over-conditioned zone, or the largest negative zone demand.
As shown in
Further, a staging timer of 10 minutes normally prevents staging up at a rate of more than 10 minutes per stage, regardless of the number of stages requested. This prevents excessive staging when a set point is initially changed. Also, a minimum on-timer of three minutes ensures that once a stage is turned on, it will remain on for at least three minutes.
The present invention, as disclosed, is able to better deal with eliminating long-term zone demands, and ensure that the actual proper stage is achieved. The present invention is thus able to operate at high loads, while still accurately achieving the set points.
Although a preferred embodiment of this invention has been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of this invention. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3946297 | Bechtel | Mar 1976 | A |
5344069 | Narikiyo | Sep 1994 | A |
5829674 | Vanostrand | Nov 1998 | A |
6540148 | Salsbury et al. | Apr 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050156049 A1 | Jul 2005 | US |