The invention relates to a heating ventilating air condition (HVAC) system.
A typical residential home has only one thermostat, usually located in the main living area, which controls the temperature for the whole home. For various reasons, such as the orientation to the sun, upstairs vs. basement, cooking in the kitchen, different insulation, amount of windows, etc., the temperature throughout the home may vary significantly (10° F.) from the temperature at the thermostat. This often results in uncomfortable temperatures in one or another area of the home. An occupant can change the air flow to a particular room by manually adjusting the vents. However, this results in only minor improvement in comfort:
Older thermostats of HVAC systems are manually set, holding the temperature between high and low limits. Newer programmable thermostats enable different settings based upon the time of day, weekend vs. weekday settings, etc. However, they still do not enable individual room control.
Commercial office spaces are commonly conditioned using variable air volume vents (VAV). The simplest VAV system incorporates a supply duct that distributes supply air in a cooling mode with a temperature of approximately 55° F. Because of the constant supply air temperature the air flow rate must be varied to meet the rising and falling heat gains or losses within the thermal tone served. If multiple rooms are to be conditioned the VAV must be adjusted to control the air flow for each particular room. Many VAVs rely upon manual adjustment, e.g. twisting a knob to open or close the vent. however, these vents are usually located on ceilings and are not easily reached.
Automated VAVs contain motors that adjust the aperture based upon inputs from a thermostat or a building automation system. They require a motor and data instructing them when and how much to move which requires wires for power and data signals. The cost and time required for installing such automated VAVs can be high.
The invention provides a heating ventilating air condition system, comprising an adjustable air vent, configured to control the air flow through the vent, an actuator, configured to control the adjustable air vent and an ambient energy harvester, configured to supply energy to the actuator, wherein the energy required for operating the actuator is provided by the ambience.
As the actuator is self-powered by one or more energy harvesters that convert ambient energies such as kinetic energy of the air flow, thermal differentials, or ambient light energy, to electrical energy, it does not need wires for supplying the actuator with power.
The system can have one or more energy storage units, such as capacitors, rechargeable batteries, mechanical storage means such as springs, etc., which can store energy harvested from the ambience in a form concentrated enough for driving the actuator.
It can have a wireless communication system to communicate with one or more sensors and other control units or a centralized controller so that no wires are required for data communication. As a result, the air vent and the actuator can be easily installed in new ducts or installed as a replacement of the existing vent cartridge.
Further, the invention provides a method for operating the above system. The method allows a reduction of energy consumption by placing at least the actuator in sleep mode. The efficiency of the system can be improved by redistributing air from one zone to another tone.
THE DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
The invention will be explained in more detail below using an exemplary embodiment and with the aid of the figures.
The following are embodiments energy harvesters which harvest energy from the ambience. Several different kinds of harvesters can be used together.
In another configuration, the propeller shaft winds a spring to store mechanical potential energy. The spring is used as the energy source to open and close the air vent.
Besides kinetic energy of the air flow other forms of energy can be harvested from the ambience:
Thermoelectric generators harvest energy from temperature differences, for example, by mounting a Peltier junction such that one plate of the junction is placed inside the duct carrying the air flow and is exposed to air that is warmer or cooler than the ambient room temperature, and the other plate is located outside the duct and is exposed to the ambient room air temperature. With temperature differences of approximately 30 K, enough energy is generated to power the actuator, the sensor, the control unit and the wireless communication system.
Light energy harvesters harvest energy from indoor light or sunlight and convert it to electrical energy. A solar cell can be mounted on the exterior of the air vent where it converts light energy in electrical energy to power the system.
The following are embodiments of actuators which can be used to control the air flow rate. They can be self-powered if they are powered by an ambient energy harvester and can have a sensor to provide feedback on the position status of the actuator to indicate how much of the air vent is opened.
Embodiments of actuators include adjustable dampers and vent cartridges with louvers. The damper or louver can be driven by a DC motor with a gear box, or a gear box coupled directly to the energy storage spring. If a spring is used as the power source, it is preferable to design the damper or louver in a way that it allows to open and close the air vent by rotation in one direction only.
Another embodiment of an actuator is shown in
Instead of controlling the air flow rate, the actuator or additional actuators can also control the speed of a motor used for generating the air flow or to control a valve which is used for setting the amount of cooling or heating of the air flow. The actuators can also be used to control the direction of the air flow. Principally, the actuator can be used to control any of the elements of the HVAC-system. By using the status information of at least one sensor, a closed-loop control of these systems can be achieved.
The following are embodiments of the control schemes that can be used with the system.
In a distributed control of temperature zones a wireless temperature sensor is placed in different temperature zones or rooms to communicate with the HVAC actuators in the zone or room. The sensor and the actuator will form a closed control loop for temperature. Humidity can be controlled in the same fashion with a wireless humidity sensor. An occupancy sensor can be easily added to the system as well.
The following is an example of the steps that can be executed:
Synchronization information needs to be included to keep the actuator and the thermostat synchronized. The control algorithm can be implemented either in the actuator or in a coordinator so that coordinator can send the command, for example the percentage of the air vent opening, directly to the actuator and the actuator doesn't have to spend time to do the calculations and can thus save power.
The main disadvantage for the distributed control of temperature zones/rooms is lack of the cooperation between the supplies (cool/hot airs) and the demand. It can put the HVAC system into risk as well if the total vent percent is very small and the compressor/heater/fans are still running at maximum capacity.
In a centralized or integrated control of the temperature zones, the actuators in the individual temperature zones or rooms not only function with its own temperature sensor in the zone as a closed control loop, but also accept command from the central controller as supervisory or override command. All equipment and sensors in the home basically form a wireless network. This will enable high level cooperation with other subsystems of he HVAC System and handle other issues like scheduling and priority assignment etc. which can hardly be handled by the distributed zone or room controllers.
The integrated control system will greatly improve the system energy efficiency and comfortableness, has the following benefits:
The operation of a centralized control can be as follows:
The following are embodiments of communication protocols used by the system.
Depending on how the sensors are powered, the communication protocol between the sensor and the actuator has to be carefully designed in order to reduce energy usage in the wireless nodes. The typical configuration of the system with the HVAC actuator is a self-powered temperature sensor, a self-powered HVAC actuator and one or more coordinators or centralized controllers, which can be mains powered. Optionally, a compressor VFD, a fan VFD, a burner fuel valve controller, which can be mains powered are present.
Since both the sensor and the actuator are self-powered and are in a power save mode for the majority of time to conserve power, it is hard to synchronize their wake up times so that they can communicate with each other. The main-powered coordinator can be used in this case as a bridge between the two self-powered devices. An embodiment of the communication process is illustrated in
The sensor data needs to be periodically transmitted to the actuator. Whenever the sensor wakes up from the power saving mode, it samples the status information such as the temperature and send the data to the coordinator that is placed within the range of its communication capability. The coordinator will buffer the data or telegram for a period of time. The actuator wakes up periodically to send a telegram including its actuator position indicating the percentage that the air vent is open as data payload to the coordinator to check the message and keeps listening for a defined time period after the checking telegram is sent out. Upon receiving the message checking telegram from the actuator, the coordinator will check if there is a message waiting for the actuator. If there is a buffered message then the message should be forwarded to the actuator immediately.
The binding can be done in several ways depending on the wireless protocol used:
The following are embodiments for the method and the circuits used for supplying energy to the system.
Many ambient energy harvesters act as high impedance sources. The load on the other hand is often a low impedance energy sink. This is why the energy harvested must be collected until it is sufficient for driving the load.
The method can have the following steps:
The system could as well operate decentralized without radio control. In this case a potentiometer or a switch as input control could set the desired temperature. Then, the temperature is held constant by self adjustment. The energy for the radio transceiver can now supply the motor. This can be performed as follows:
The actuator can be an electric motor with an ironless armature with brushes and having the following specification:
Or, as an example, a gear dc motors with 3Vdc/13.5 Ω having 0.15 W of the company Faulhaber could be used. This motor is available with gears from 6:1 up to 324:1. A battery less system with the described energy collecting and supply device and such a motor would be able to drive a self powered air condition controller.
A thermoelectrical converter can charge a 2200 μF capacitor to e.g. 4.5V in a few minutes. The energy stored is: W=C×Uz/2=2200 As/V×(4.5V)2/2=22 mWs. This energy can be converted to a constant 3V, where W=C×U2/2−1100 As/V×(3V)2=10 mWs are lost. Nearly 12 mWs at 3V remain. This is nearly supplied to a motor over 50 ms. Another possibility is to discharge the capacitor by supplying the 3V motor directly with 4,5V until e.g. 2V remain. Only a residual energy of W=C×U2/2=2200 As/V×(2V)2/2=4,4 mWs remain unused. The remaining charge decreases the recharge time and therefore isn't lost. The applicable energy is nearly 18 mWs. This is 0,36 W for a power time of 50 ms.
The Motor should start rather quickly with a low mass because the usable energy is only available for e.g. 50 ms. This may also be realizable with motors not having an ironless armature.
Inrush current could be reduced by a current limiter, as long as not too much energy is lost.
Switch through of the energy at variable thresholds is defined by IC1. In this example, the threshold is 4.6 V. Switch through time of energy is adjustable by C2. In this example, it is 130 ms. The regulated output by the high efficiency buck converter is adjustable by R3 for the motor and the radio transceiver. It is assumed that the radio transceiver device has a 100 Ω resistance.
Under these conditions, a capacitor of 2200 μF becomes charged to 4.5V and is discharged by the buck converter to a 3V output voltage. A radio transceiver and actuator interval of 84 seconds can be achieved, where the 3V regulated output is discharged in 133 ms. The available discharge time of 133 ms is much more then the required 11 ms for the radio transceiver supply. A lot of energy remains for driving the actuator as the motor can consume the remaining 120 ms of the available powering time. An enlargement of the energy collecting capacitor increases the supply time for the actuator linearly but also increases the required charging time linearly.
The HVAC actuator with energy harvesters enables very advanced control for home and commercial buildings. They are easy to install to the new homes and retrofit to the old homes. The energy efficiency and the comfortableness of the HVAC system will be greatly improved with the device.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/132,351, filed Jun. 18, 2008, and which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP09/57641 | 6/18/2009 | WO | 00 | 8/26/2010 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61132351 | Jun 2008 | US |