Eelcos
Electrical
- Sep 24, 2014
- 9
At our company building we have a heat recovery ventilation unit with cross flow heat exchanger. We have calculated the Effectiveness of the heat exchanger by measuring the outdoor inlet air temperature, the indoor supply air temperature and the indoor return air temperature. I measured an effectiveness of about 70%. To my feeling this is quite low, because the brochure of the unit specifies up to 90%. But probably that is under optimal conditions.
Someone told to me that the Effectiveness of the unit (in %) strongly depends on the temperature difference between indoor and outdoor. But I have the feeling that the Effectiveness is quite constant (because it is related to the physical heat transfer properties of the heat exchanger), and that the relationship with indoor/outdoor temperature only applies to the absolute value of recovered heat.
I have looked around at the internet, but I could not find any chart of heat exchanger Effectiveness as a function of the indoor/outdoor temperature delta.
Does anyone know how this works? And which role plays the air humidity in the Effectiveness of the unit?
Someone told to me that the Effectiveness of the unit (in %) strongly depends on the temperature difference between indoor and outdoor. But I have the feeling that the Effectiveness is quite constant (because it is related to the physical heat transfer properties of the heat exchanger), and that the relationship with indoor/outdoor temperature only applies to the absolute value of recovered heat.
I have looked around at the internet, but I could not find any chart of heat exchanger Effectiveness as a function of the indoor/outdoor temperature delta.
Does anyone know how this works? And which role plays the air humidity in the Effectiveness of the unit?