The invention relates to a device and a method for the temperature control of a room according to the preambles of claims 1 and 27.
So-called concrete core activation systems are known from the prior art for the air conditioning of rooms having concrete ceilings or concrete walls. In these systems pipes carrying heating or cooling media are mounted in, below or on the concrete ceiling or the concrete wall. By storing the heating or cooling energy in the concrete mass of the ceiling or the walls and a time-delayed delivery of the stored heating or cooling energy, an energy-efficient air conditioning of the rooms can be achieved. Thus, for example, at night a cooling fluid (for example, water) is cooled and passed through the pipes in a concrete core activated ceiling or wall whereby the ceiling or the wall is slowly cooled. The cooling energy stored in the concrete ceiling or wall can then be released into the room during the day in particular in the warm summer months, to slowly lower the room temperature in the room.
However, the installation of such thermally activatable ceilings or walls is restricted to new buildings. When renovating old buildings, such concrete core activation of the ceilings or walls cannot be installed subsequently. In the case of ceilings or walls with concrete core activation it is furthermore disadvantageous that pipes laid in the concrete ceiling or wall could be unintentionally damaged, for example, by the drilling of holes. Repair of damaged pipes is scarcely possible since the pipes embedded in concrete are difficult to access for a repair. The statics and the stability of ceilings or walls provided with pipes also suffer from the pipes embedded in concrete. Furthermore, the manufacture of such concrete core activation systems is very time consuming and costly. Another disadvantages lies in the inertia of the thermal system which is based on the time-delayed release of the thermal energy stored in the concrete accumulator mass to the room to be temperature controlled.
In order to eliminate these disadvantages, temperature control systems are known from the prior art which can also be provided subsequently on pipe-free ceilings or walls. These temperature control systems usually comprise ceiling or wall elements in which pipes are disposed which can be acted upon with a heating or cooling medium. These ceiling or wall elements are fixed to the ceiling or wall. The thermal energy stored in the heating or cooling medium which is passed through the pipes is diverted via a frame or a lining of the ceiling or wall elements in to the room to be temperature controlled by thermal radiation and free convection. Such a system is described for example in EP 1371915 A1 in which phase change materials are used as thermal accumulators.
These temperature control systems have the disadvantage that the thermal energy from the heating or cooling medium flowing into the pipelines is released directly and instantaneously by thermal radiation and convection into the room. In these temperature control systems the surfaces of the ceilings or the walls are also occupied by the ceiling or wall elements. This has the result that the ceiling or wall surface is thermally separated from the room to be temperature controlled which is why the mass of the ceilings or the walls cannot be used for storage cooling (or heating) in the night.
Starting from this, it is the object of the present invention to provide a device and a method for the temperature control of a room in which the mass of the ceilings or walls can be used as a thermal accumulator without pipes for the passage of a heating or cooling medium for thermal actuation of the accumulator needing to be incorporated in the ceilings or walls. It is furthermore the object of the invention to provide the most energy-efficient temperature control system with short response times. Furthermore, it should be made possible to install these temperature control systems subsequently, including when renovating old buildings.
These objects are solved with a device for the temperature control of a room having the features of claim 1 and by a method having the features of claim 27. Preferred embodiments of the device according to the invention can be deduced from subclaims 2 to 26.
The invention is explained in detail hereinafter by means of exemplary embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawings. In the drawings:
The element 10 comprises a panel 1 containing expanded graphite or consisting completely of expanded graphite.
The production of expanded graphite (expanded graphite) is known inter alia from U.S. Pat. No. 3,404,061-A. In order to produce expanded graphite, graphite intercalation compounds or graphite salts such as, for example, graphite hydrogen sulphate or graphite nitrate are heated in a shock manner. The volume of the graphite particles is thereby increased by a factor of about 200-400 and at the same time the bulk density decreases to values of 2-20 g/l. The expanded graphite thus obtained consists or worm- or concertina-shaped aggregates. If completely expanded graphite is compacted under the directional action of pressure, the layer planes of the graphite are preferably arranged perpendicular to the direction of action of the pressure, where the individual aggregates become entangled. In this way, self-supporting surface structures such as, for example, webs, plates or moulded bodies can be produced from expanded graphite.
In order to stiffen and increase the stability of these graphite panels or moulded bodies, the expanded graphite can be mixed with curing binders such as, for example, resins or plastics, in particular elastomers or duromers. In order improve the stability of panels made of expanded graphite, it is particularly suitable to mix the expanded graphite with thermoplastic and/or thermosetting plastics which can be introduced into the expanded graphite for example by impregnation or by means of a powder method. After the binder mixed with the expanded graphite has been cured, the graphite moulded bodies or plates made from these mixtures have a sufficient stability for the intended application provided according to the invention. The graphite panels produced in this way are in particular self-supporting and can readily be fixed to components such as ceilings or walls, for example by adhesive bonding or screwing.
Pure expanded graphite, in the same way as mixtures of expanded graphite with binders, has a very good thermal conductivity. The thermal conductivity of a mixture of expanded graphite with a binder is still very high with a 50 wt. % binder fraction according to the type of binder used. Insofar as graphite panels are mentioned in the following, these are understood as panels which either consist of pure expanded graphite or a mixture of expanded graphite with a binder.
It is also possible to manufacture graphite panels from mixtures of expanded graphite with phase-change materials (PCM, phase change materials). For this purpose, common phase-change materials, for example based on paraffin, wax or salt can be added during the manufacture of the graphite panels. Such a graphite panel with a phase-change material can be used in the temperature control systems according to the invention as additional thermal accumulators (latent heat accumulator) along with the component 5 acting as a thermal accumulator.
Pipes 9 are embedded in the graphite panel 1 shown in
The fixing of the elements 10 is preferably accomplished by a thermally conducting adhesive 4, by which means one principal surface 12 of the panel is adhesively bonded to the surface 11 of the component 5. As a result of the adhesive bonding, the principal surface 12 of the panel 1 is in flat thermal contact with the surface 11 of the thermal accumulator formed by the component 5, preferably over the entire principal surface 12.
The other principal surface 13 of the panel 1 can be provided with a stiffening layer 6 as in the exemplary embodiment shown in
The pipes 9 running in the panel 1 can be incorporated during the manufacture of the graphite panel 1. The pipes 9 preferably comprise pipes made of metal, for example copper, or plastic pipes, for example made of polypropylene or cross-linked polyethylene. However pipes made of metal are to be preferred because of the better heat transfer. As shown in the exemplary embodiment in
For embedding the pipes 9 in the panel 1, during manufacture of the panel, the pipes 9 can be laid in the filling of worm- or concertina-shaped aggregates and this combination can be pressed in a known manner by action of pressure (for example by means of rollers or pressure plates) to form a dimensionally-stable graphite panel 1. In order to increase the stability of the panels, one of the aforementioned binders can be added during the production process. The graphite panels 1 thus produced with pipes 9 embedded therein typically have thicknesses between 8 and 50 mm. The density of the graphite panels 1 is usually in the range of 0.01 to 0.5 g/cm3 (depending on the fraction of added binder). The graphite panels 1 have a thermal conductivity of 3 to 6 W/mK.
As a result of the good thermal conductivity of the graphite panel 1, a certain proportion of the thermal energy stored in a heating or cooling medium passed through the pipes 9 can initially be passed by heat conduction from the pipes 9 to the free principal surface 13 of the panel 1 and released from there by thermal radiation and free convection to the room R to be temperature controlled. This release of heat (or release of cold when a cooling medium is passed through the pipes) takes place very rapidly with the result that the room can be heated (or cooled) very rapidly. Another portion of the thermal energy stored in the heating or cooling medium is transferred by heat conduction from the pipes 9 via the heat conducting panel 1 to the thermal accumulator formed by the component 5. By this means, the thermal accumulator is heated (or cooled when a cooling medium is passed through the pipes). The thermal accumulator can then release the thus intermediately stored thermal energy in a time-delayed manner to the room, where the good thermal conductivity of the panel 1 ensures that this is accomplished largely free from losses. The heating (or cooling) of the room R accomplished in this manner takes place on a longer time scale (of a few hours). The temperature control system according to the invention is therefore able to bring the room R to be temperature controlled to a desired room temperature both rapidly and also slowly using the thermal accumulator. Thus for example, at night in summer the thermal accumulator can be cooled by passing a cooling medium (for example cold water) through the pipes 9. During the day the thermal accumulator can then be used for cooling the room by means of a time-delayed release of cold to the room.
In a corresponding manner, in winter during the day the temperature control system according to the invention can firstly be heated for instantaneous heating of the room by passing a heating medium through the pipes. At the same time the thermal accumulator is loaded with heat. At night the flow of the heating medium can be stopped since the time-delayed release of heat from the loaded thermal accumulator is sufficient to keep the room at a (lower) room temperature at night.
In the exemplary embodiment of a device according to the invention for the temperature control of a room R shown in
A non-woven fabric 3 and a graphite film 15 are preferably disposed between the base plate 2a of the frame 2 and the graphite panel 1. The non-woven fabric 3 can for example comprise a glass fibre or a carbon fibre non-woven. In combination with the perforation of the base plate 2, the non-woven fabric 3 ensures good sound absorption of the ceiling element 10. The graphite film 15 comprises a thin film of expanded graphite. The thickness of the graphite film 15 is preferably between 0.05 mm and 3 mm, in particular between 0.2 and 3 mm.
The non-woven fabric 3 and the graphite film 15 disposed thereon preferably comprises a non-detachable composite which can be produced for example by calendering. Such a composite can particularly expediently be produced from a carbon fibre non-woven and a graphite film 15 of expanded graphite. When calendering a thin film of expanded graphite with a carbon fibre non-woven, the carbon particles of the non-woven surface and the surface of the graphite film become entangled with one another so that a firm and non-detachable composite is formed between the carbon fibre non-woven 3 and the graphite film 15. It is particularly appropriate to use a perforated graphite film 15. Perforation of the graphite film specifically increases its flexibility and thereby facilitates the handling of the film. Since graphite comprises a brittle material, there is the risk of the film tearing or breaking when handling thin films of expanded graphite. This risk can be reduced significantly by perforation of the graphite film 15.
The arrangement of the ceiling element 10 or plurality of adjacent ceiling elements on the surface 11 of the component 5 corresponds to the exemplary embodiment of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 055 440.8 | Dec 2009 | DE | national |
10 2009 055 441.6 | Dec 2009 | DE | national |
10 2009 055 442.4 | Dec 2009 | DE | national |
10 2009 055 443.2 | Dec 2009 | DE | national |
10 2009 055 444.0 | Dec 2009 | DE | national |
10 2010 041 822.6 | Sep 2010 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/070978 | 12/31/2010 | WO | 00 | 9/27/2012 |