High Heat Gain Heat Gain
High Heat Gain Heat Gain
High Heat Gain Heat Gain
type of building
location of building
duration of high internal temperature
expected comfort conditions.
degree of air movement
percentage saturation
Split air conditioners have two main parts, the outdoor unit is the section
which generates the cold refrigerant gas and the indoor unit uses this cold
refrigerant to cool the air in a space.
The outdoor unit uses a compressor and air cooled condenser to provide
cold refrigerant to a cooling coil in the indoor unit.
A fan then blows air across the cooling coil and into the room.
The indoor unit can either be ceiling mounted (cassette unit), floor
mounted or duct type.
The drawing below shows a ceiling mounted (cassette unit).
The photographs below show a ceiling mounted
cassette and an outdoor unit.
Window / Wall Units
Window or wall units are more compact than split units since all the plant items are contained in
one box.
Window units are installed into an appropriate hole in the window and supported from a metal
frame.
Wall units like the one shown below are built into an external wall and contain all the necessary
items of equipment to provide cool air in summer and some may even provide heating in winter.
A small hermetically sealed compressor is used to provide refrigerant gas at the
pressure required to operate the refrigeration cycle.
The condenser is used to condense the refrigerant to a liquid which is then
reduced in pressure and piped to the cooling coil.
3.0 Fan Coil Units
These are room air conditioners but use chilled water instead of refrigerant.
Units can be floor or ceiling mounted.
The chilled water is piped to a finned heat exchanger as in a fan convector.
A fan blows room air across the heat exchanger and cool air is emitted into the
room, as shown below.
Fan coil units may be looked upon as being small air handling units located in
rooms and they can be piped with chilled water for cooling and low temperature
hot water (LTHW) for heating if necessary.
The room temperature can be controlled with low, medium and high fan speeds
and chilled water flow is varied with a two-port or three-port motorised valve.
The four-pipe system has two heating and two cooling pipes and may have a single
heat exchanger or two separate heat exchangers for heating and cooling.
A three-pipe system used heating flow, cooling flow and common return pipework.
Choosing an A/C System
Generally central plant systems are used in large prestigious buildings where
a high quality environment is to be achieved. Cassette units and other split
systems can be used together with central plant systems to provide a more
flexible design.
Each system has its own advantages and the following is a summary of some
of the main advantages and disadvantages.
therefore many units would be required to cool rooms with high heat gains.
Fan Coil Units - Advantages:
1.Cheaper to install than all air central plant system.
2. Individual room control.
3.Works well where rooms have individual requirements.
4.No long runs of ductwork.
5.Can be used to heat as well as cool if 3 or 4-pipe system is used.
1.Sometimes the indoor unit fan becomes noisy, especially when the speed is changing
with in-built controls.
2.Each unit requires maintenance.
3.Long runs of pipework are required.
4.A chiller is still required to produce chilled water therefore they do not save as much in
plant
and plant room space as room air conditioners.
Also boilers will be required if heating mode is installed.
5. Fresh air facility may not be installed.
6.Cooling output is limited to about 5 kW.