Abstract
Commercial rooftop units that incorporate variable speed components are quickly entering into the market place; however, the design and modeling tools that calculate the energy benefits of these units cannot properly estimate performance. This is due to two factors: 1) There are insufficient measured performance data of real systems that can be entered into these simulations, and 2) building energy simulators are unable to properly interpret performance data. Therefore, publicly available datasets designed to encompass the entire performance map coupled with control sequence information are needed as inputs for these modelling programs to accurately estimate energy savings and promote variable speed RTUs. As part of the Verification and Uncertainty Characterization for Energy Simulation milestone funded by the Department of Energy, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory recorded and published data across the entire performance range for two commercially available RTUs; one with a two-stage compressor and variable speed supply fan, and another with a fully variable speed compressor, supply fan and condenser fan. This paper details 1) how the design of experiments was created as well as how the units were controlled, and 2) the operational limitations of the two units. The paper will also discuss methods for building energy simulation programs to properly interpret these data sets and integrate them into building energy simulation models.
Original language | American English |
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Number of pages | 11 |
State | Published - 2018 |
Event | 17th International Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Conference at Purdue - West Lafayette, Indiana Duration: 9 Jul 2018 → 12 Jul 2018 |
Conference
Conference | 17th International Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Conference at Purdue |
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City | West Lafayette, Indiana |
Period | 9/07/18 → 12/07/18 |
NREL Publication Number
- NREL/CP-5500-71133
Keywords
- energy simulation
- laboratory testing
- performance map
- variable speed RTU