This invention generally relates to liquid heating apparatus and, in a representatively illustrated embodiment thereof, more particularly relates to a specially designed heat pump water heater and associated control system.
In the past, various proposals have been made for operatively coupling a heat pump to an electric water heater to controllably add refrigerant heat to the water stored in the tank portion of the water heater during water heating demand cycles. Since the coefficient of performance of a heat pump is considerably better than the coefficient of performance of the electric resistance type heating structure of an electric water heater, this use of a heat pump provides an opportunity to substantially reduce the operating cost of an electric water heater to which it is operatively coupled, with the electric heating structure being available as a supplemental water heating mechanism should the heat pump fail or need heating supplementation.
As is well known in the water heater art, there is a tradeoff between the heating cost effectiveness of a heat pump and the more rapid water heating capability of an electric heating element. In conventionally constructed heat pump water heaters the user typically has little if any ability to selectively adjust the relationship between water heating cost effectiveness and water heating rapidity in the water heater to suit varying operating environments and hot water demand situations. An additional need that exists in the heat pump water heater area is the need for improvements in the placement and component arrangement of the heat pump portion of the water heater. It is to these needs that the present invention is primarily directed.
In carrying out principles of the present invention, in accordance with a representatively illustrated embodiment thereof, liquid heating apparatus is provided that comprises first apparatus operative to transfer refrigerant heat to a liquid, second apparatus operative to transfer electrical heat to the liquid, and a control system. The liquid heating apparatus illustratively includes an electric water heater having a tank for storing water to be heated, the first apparatus illustratively includes a refrigerant circuit structure, preferably a heat pump, operatively coupled to the electric water heater, and the second apparatus illustratively includes an electric resistance type heating structure extending through an interior portion of the tank.
According to an aspect of the overall invention, the control system may have a heating mode operative, in a heating cycle initiated in response to a sensed demand for liquid heating, to initially utilize the first apparatus, at the start of the heating cycle, to transfer refrigerant heat to the liquid while preventing operation of the second apparatus for a predetermined lockout period, thereafter utilize the second apparatus to supplement the refrigerant heating of the liquid with electrical heating thereof if the heating demand has not been satisfied by the previous refrigerant heating of the liquid, and then terminate the operation of both the first heating apparatus and the second heating apparatus at the end of the heating cycle when the demand for liquid heating is satisfied. The lockout of the second apparatus during each heating cycle in this heating mode is illustratively initiated only at the start of such heating cycle.
According to other aspects of the overall invention, the first apparatus may include a water circuit coupled to the tank and having a pump operative to draw water from a bottom portion of the tank and return the water to a top portion of the tank, the first apparatus may include a compressor, and the control system may be operative, if necessary, to utilize the second apparatus to heat the liquid to a predetermined minimum temperature prior to permitting operation of the compressor.
According to a further aspect of the overall invention, the control system may be operative to control the first apparatus and the second apparatus in either one of user-selectable first and second heating modes. The first heating mode, when selected, is operative in response a sensed demand for liquid heating to initially utilize the first apparatus to transfer refrigerant heat to the liquid, while preventing operation of the second apparatus for a predetermined first lockout period, and thereafter utilize the second apparatus to supplement the refrigerant heating of the liquid with electrical heating thereof if the heating demand has not been satisfied by the previous refrigerant heating of the liquid.
The second heating mode, when selected, is operative in response a sensed demand for liquid heating to initially utilize the first apparatus to transfer refrigerant heat to the liquid, while preventing operation of the second apparatus for a predetermined second lockout period of a different magnitude than the first lockout period, and thereafter utilizing the second apparatus to supplement the refrigerant heating of the liquid with electrical heating thereof if the heating demand has not been satisfied by the previous refrigerant heating of the liquid.
The control system may be additionally operative to control the first apparatus and the second apparatus in a third user-selectable heating mode which, when selected, is operative for only a predetermined time period to utilize only the second apparatus to transfer electric heat to the liquid in response to a sensed demand for liquid heating, the control system, after the expiration of the predetermined time period, automatically selecting one of the first and second heating modes for use in satisfying a sensed liquid heating demand.
According to a further aspect of the overall invention, the control system may be operative to control the first apparatus and the second apparatus in either one of user-selectable first and second heating modes. The first heating mode, when selected, is operative to utilize the first apparatus and, if needed, the second apparatus to transfer heat to the liquid in response to a sensed demand for liquid heating. The second heating mode, when selected, is operative, for only a predetermined time period, to utilize only the second apparatus to transfer heat to the liquid in response to a sensed demand for liquid heating, the control system, after the expiration of the predetermined time period, automatically selecting the first heating mode for use in satisfying a sensed liquid heating demand.
According to another aspect of the overall invention, the control system is operative to receive a desired liquid heating temperature set point input by a user of the liquid heating apparatus, and having a user-selectable heating mode which, in response to a sensed demand for liquid heating, initially utilizes the first apparatus to transfer refrigerant heat to the liquid, while preventing operation of the second apparatus for a predetermined first lockout period, and then utilizes the second apparatus to supplement the refrigerant heating of the liquid with electrical heating thereof if the heating demand has not been satisfied by the previous refrigerant heating of the liquid. If the user-input temperature set point is equal to or greater than a predetermined magnitude, the control system is automatically operative to implement a second heating mode similar to said first heating mode but having a predetermined second lockout period greater than the first lockout period.
In accordance with yet another aspect of the overall invention, water heating apparatus is provided comprising an electric water heater having a tank for storing water to be heated, and an electric heating element extending through an interior portion of the tank and operative to add electric heat to water therein. A refrigerant circuit structure has sequentially connected in series therein a compressor, a condenser coil operative to receive a throughflow of tank water to be heated by refrigerant passing through the condenser coil, an expansion valve, and an evaporator coil with an associated evaporator fan. The evaporator coil forms an outer wall portion of a plenum structure within the interior of which the compressor is disposed, the evaporator fan being operative, during operation of the refrigerant circuit structure, to flow air through the interior of the plenum structure and then outwardly through the evaporator coil, to thereby transfer heat from the fan and the compressor to the evaporator.
The water heating apparatus further comprises a water circuit extending between the tank and the condenser coil and having connected therein a pump operative to sequentially flow water from the tank, through the condenser coil and then back into the tank, and a control system operative to utilize the refrigerant circuit structure and the electric heating element to maintain a predetermined water temperature in the tank.
Preferably, the control system has a user-selectable heating mode operative in a given heating cycle to sequentially operate the refrigerant circuit structure and then operate the electric heating element, if necessary, to supplement the water heating of the refrigerant circuit structure. Illustratively, the tank has an upper end, and the refrigerant circuit structure is a heat pump disposed on the upper end of the tank.
Turning first to
Water heater 12 has a vertically elongated cylindrical storage tank 18 for holding a quantity (representatively fifty gallons) of water to be heated. The tank 18 has a side-mounted cold water inlet 20 adjacent its lower end for receiving pressurized cold water from a source thereof, and a side-mounted hot water outlet 22 adjacent its upper end through which heated water may be periodically delivered, on demand, to hot water-utilizing fixtures such as sinks, bathtubs, showers, dishwashers and the like. Upper and lower electrical resistance heating elements 24,26 respectively extend through upper and lower interior portions of the tank 18. An upper tank thermistor 28 senses an upper tank water temperature, and a lower tank thermistor 30 senses a lower tank water temperature.
With continuing reference to
A second flow passage 46 (see
A thermistor 54 senses the ambient temperature; a thermistor 56 senses the compressor discharge temperature; a thermistor 58 senses the evaporator coil inlet temperature; a thermistor 60 senses the evaporator coil suction temperature; and a thermistor 62 senses the condenser coil water discharge temperature. While the above-mentioned temperature sensing devices are representatively thermistors, it will be readily apparent to those of skill in this particular art that various other types of temperature sensors could alternatively be utilized without departing from principles of the present invention.
As shown in
Referring again to
In the representatively illustrated form thereof, the touchpad 66 has disposed on the face thereof up and down temperature setting arrows 68,70 which may be pressed by a user to increase or decrease the selected desired tank water temperature setting. To the right of the arrows 68,70 is a vertical column of temperature setting indicating lights 72,74,76,78,80,82 that respectively correspond to six user-selected water temperature settings having magnitudes that increase vertically from indicating light 72 to indicating light 82. Thus, for example, if the user wants to select a “normal” water temperature to be maintained in the tank 18 the user simply presses one of the temperature setting arrows 68,70 one or more times until the indicating light 76 is illuminated, indicating that a “normal” tank water temperature setting has been selected.
At the lower end of the touchpad 66 are four mode selection areas 84,86,88 and 90 which may be pressed by a user to select manners in which the water heating apparatus 10 will function. These touchpad areas 84,86,88,90 respectively correspond to an “energy saver” mode, a “normal” mode, an “off” mode, and an “electric heat only” mode. Pressing the “energy saver” area 84 illuminates a corresponding indicating light 84a on the touchpad 66, pressing the “normal” area 86 illuminates a corresponding indicating light 86a on the touchpad 66, and pressing the “electric heat only” area 90 illuminates a corresponding indicating light 90a on the touchpad 66.
As will be subsequently described in greater detail herein, the energy saver mode of the control system 16 assists the water heater 12 in obtaining maximum efficiency. The normal mode, on the other hand, is geared to maximizing the performance of the water heater 12 while still providing good energy savings. Each of these two modes, in a predetermined, somewhat different manner, first utilizes heat pump energy (in the form of refrigerant heat) to raise the water heater tank temperature before additionally utilizing electric heat if needed to fulfill a water heating demand. When selected, the electric heat only mode utilizes only electric heat to meet water heating demands, but is automatically limited to a set operational time period built into the control system. Upon expiration of this time period, the control system automatically returns the water heater to its previously selected normal or energy saver mode.
Turning now to the flow chart of
If both of these sensed temperature conditions are met, the control system 16 effects a transfer to step 96 at which a pre-warm cycle is initiated to heat the tank water to a predetermined minimum temperature (representatively 80° F.) to protect the compressor 34, at its subsequent start-up, by assuring that its initial discharge temperature (as measured by thermistor 56) is sufficiently high to prevent damage to the compressor 34. In response to the pre-warm cycle being initiated at step 96, the control system 16 energizes the water pump 48 at high speed, and energizes both of the electric heating elements 24 and 26. A transfer is then made to step 98 at which a query is made as to whether the sensed lower tank temperature is equal to or greater than its predetermined minimum temperature. While the answer to this query is negative, the tank water temperature continues to be monitored at step 98 until the query answer becomes positive, at which point the electric heat is de-energized at step 100 and a subsequent transfer is made to step 102.
At step 102 a query is made as to whether the tank water needs heat. If it does not, the control system 16 maintains the operational sequence at step 102 until it is determined at such step that the tank water does need heat from the water heating apparatus 10, at which point a transfer is made to step 104. At step 104 a query is made as to which operational mode (i.e., the energy saver mode, the normal mode or the electric heat only mode) has been selected. If the energy saver mode has been selected a transfer is made to step 106. At step 106, the heat pump 14 is started, to deliver refrigerant heat (via the circulation of water through pump 48) to the tank water, and electric heat is locked out for a predetermined delay period (representatively 45 minutes).
A transfer is then made to step 108 where a query is made as to whether the tank water needs heat. If the tank water does not need heat, a transfer is made back to step 102 wherein the system waits until there is another call for tank water heating. If it is determined at step 108 that the tank water does need heat, a transfer is made to step 110 at which a query is made as to whether the previously set electric heat delay (or “lockout”) period set at step 106 has expired. If such delay period has not expired, the system continues to loop through steps 108,109 as indicated, until the delay period expires, at which point a transfer is made to step 112 (see
An adaptive mode, associated with the energy saver mode, is also preferably pre-programmed into the control system 16. If, at step 106, the user-selected tank water set point temperature is at or above a predetermined threshold magnitude (representatively, 130° F.), the adaptive mode is automatically initiated by the control system 16 in place of the energy saver mode to further increase the efficiency of the water heating apparatus 10. When this adaptive mode is automatically initiated at step 106, the electric heat delay period is set to a lesser time period (representatively 20 minutes) than in the energy saver mode, and a transfer is made to step 108 as previously described.
If at step 104 in
A transfer is then made to step 120 where a query is made as to whether the tank water needs heat. If the tank water does not need heat, a transfer is made back to step 102 wherein the system waits until there is another call for tank water heating. If it is determined at step 120 that the tank water does need heat, a transfer is made to step 122 at which a query is made as to whether the electric heat delay (or “lockout”) period set at step 118 has expired. If such delay period has not expired, the system continues to loop through steps 120,122 as indicated, until the delay period expires, at which point a transfer is made to step 124 (see
A normal high temperature mode, associated with the normal mode, is also preferably pre-programmed into the control system 16. If, at step 118, the user-selected tank water set point temperature is at or above a predetermined threshold magnitude (representatively, 130° F.), the normal high temperature mode is automatically initiated by the control system 16 in place of the normal mode to further increase the efficiency of the water heating apparatus 10. When this normal high temperature mode is automatically initiated at step 118, the electric heat delay period is set to a lesser time (representatively 15 minutes) than in the normal mode, and a transfer is made to step 120 as previously described.
If at step 104 in
The foregoing detailed description is to be clearly understood as being given by way of illustration and example only, the spirit and scope of the present invention being limited solely by the appended claims.
The present application claims the benefit of the filing date of provisional U.S. patent application No. 61/276,110 filed Sep. 8, 2009. The entire disclosure of the provisional application is hereby incorporated herein by this reference.
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