EloyRD
Mechanical
- Jan 31, 2013
- 33
Good evening, community:
I'm reviewing the HVAC design of a chiller plant in the basement of a 30-floor building.
The main equipment present in this room are:
- Chiller / 360 ton / 351 kW (x3 units)
- Primary loop pump / 1512 GPM @ 60 ft w.c. / 30HP (x4 units)
- Secondary loop pump / 2268 GPM @ 130 ft w.c. / 100 HP (x3 units)
- Chiller / 50 ton / 38 kW (x1 unit)
- Primary loop pump / 120 GPM @ 90 ft w.c. / 7.5 HP (x2 units)
To ventilate and prevent a temperature rise greater than 10°C (18 °F) -as is requested in ASHRAE 15-, the design proposes two AHU to provide a total 240000 BTU/H cooling capacity.
If I take for the pumps a mechanical inefficiency that turns into heat of 20%, I obtain 65 kW = 221 000 BTU/H. That number is almost the full required cooling capacity, and it seems OK to neglect any heat load from the chiller carcass or motors.
None of the engineers in the office remember seeing a design of a basement chiller plant with AHU; we have only seen designs with forced ventilation. But it seems that the heat load is high enough that cooling is required.
I have two strong doubts and would love any comments or a reference to some guide or bibliography about what is standard practice:
- Is it OK to neglect the heat load from the chiller accessories?
- Do AHU are usually required or proposed in design for chiller plants in a basement?
Thanks for any help.
Regards.
Eloy Ruiz
I'm reviewing the HVAC design of a chiller plant in the basement of a 30-floor building.
The main equipment present in this room are:
- Chiller / 360 ton / 351 kW (x3 units)
- Primary loop pump / 1512 GPM @ 60 ft w.c. / 30HP (x4 units)
- Secondary loop pump / 2268 GPM @ 130 ft w.c. / 100 HP (x3 units)
- Chiller / 50 ton / 38 kW (x1 unit)
- Primary loop pump / 120 GPM @ 90 ft w.c. / 7.5 HP (x2 units)
To ventilate and prevent a temperature rise greater than 10°C (18 °F) -as is requested in ASHRAE 15-, the design proposes two AHU to provide a total 240000 BTU/H cooling capacity.
If I take for the pumps a mechanical inefficiency that turns into heat of 20%, I obtain 65 kW = 221 000 BTU/H. That number is almost the full required cooling capacity, and it seems OK to neglect any heat load from the chiller carcass or motors.
None of the engineers in the office remember seeing a design of a basement chiller plant with AHU; we have only seen designs with forced ventilation. But it seems that the heat load is high enough that cooling is required.
I have two strong doubts and would love any comments or a reference to some guide or bibliography about what is standard practice:
- Is it OK to neglect the heat load from the chiller accessories?
- Do AHU are usually required or proposed in design for chiller plants in a basement?
Thanks for any help.
Regards.
Eloy Ruiz