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Home heating from the good Earth.


Imagine for a moment that you hear someone talking about a magic battery capable of collecting the oppressive warmth of the summer sun and storing it until winter, when you really need it to heat your house. By using the magic battery, he tells you, you will never have to burn another gallon of propane, natural gas or fuel oil to keep your house warm, and--as an added bonus--the magic battery also stores the waste heat from your home's air conditioning air conditioning, mechanical process for controlling the humidity, temperature, cleanliness, and circulation of air in buildings and rooms. Indoor air is conditioned and regulated to maintain the temperature-humidity ratio that is most comfortable and healthful.  until the mercury plummets and the snow flies.

Too good to be true?

Not at all. In fact, the magic battery is nothing more otherworldly than the ground beneath your feet, and the means used to move the heat back and forth is the same clever science that makes refrigerators and air conditioners possible: the common heat exchanger heat exchanger

Any of several devices that transfer heat from a hot to a cold fluid. In many engineering applications, one fluid needs to be heated and another cooled, a requirement economically accomplished by a heat exchanger.
.

The principle of the heat exchanger

Most of us know the earth stays a fairly constant temperature several feet below the surface. That's because it takes so long for the ground to gain or lose heat, by the time it begins to react to one season, the next season is already underway. So once you dig down five to eight feet, the soil will be a fairly constant 45-50[degrees]F in the northern latitudes, and 50-70[degrees]F in the south.

This is all easy enough to understand. But now it's about to get counterintuitive coun·ter·in·tu·i·tive  
adj.
Contrary to what intuition or common sense would indicate: "Scientists made clear what may at first seem counterintuitive, that the capacity to be pleasant toward a fellow creature is ...
, because I'm going to tell you that you can heat your home cheaply and conveniently by extracting heat from soil that is only 15 or 20 degrees above freezing. How? By circulating, through buried tubing, water that is even colder than the earth itself. Since heat always flows toward where it's colder, the water--mixed with an environmentally-safe antifreeze antifreeze, substance added to a solvent to lower its freezing point. The solution formed is called an antifreeze mixture. Antifreeze is typically added to water in the cooling system of an internal-combustion engine so that it may be cooled below the freezing point  solution--picks up heat from the ground as it circulates. Thus it will be warmer when it returns to your house than when it left it.

The water is still cold, of course; no warmer than the earth it came from. So it has to give up its heat to something even colder--a refrigerant re·frig·er·ant
adj.
1. Cooling or freezing; refrigerating.

2. Reducing fever.

n.
1. A substance, such as air, ammonia, water, or carbon dioxide, used to provide cooling either as the working substance of
, such as liquid Freon. Now we're getting somewhere, though it may not seem like it, yet. Inside a heat pump heat pump: see air conditioning.
heat pump

Device for transferring heat from a substance or space at one temperature to another at a higher temperature.
 unit, the very cold Freon circulates in a double coil with the earth-warmed water, absorbing its heat and making the water cold again, relatively speaking. But even though the Freon has absorbed most of the heat the water gained from the soil (becoming a low-pressure gas in the process), it's still no warmer than the ground outside. And we need to make it hot; hotter even than the air inside our house. How? By compressing it to a very high pressure. This concentrates the gas and raises its temperature to approximately 165 degrees. Then, by running the hot high-pressure gas through a second heat exchanger (either an air duct coil or a hot water tank), the heat is given up into your house. In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified"
meantime, meanwhile
, the gas cools to a liquid, runs through an expansion valve (Steam Engine) a cut-off valve, to shut off steam from the cylinder before the end of each stroke.

See also: Expansion
, and returns to a cold, low-pressure state, ready for the next go-round.

In summer the process is reversed: the excess heat inside your home is returned to the soil where, as I mentioned earlier, it will be available in a few months for winter heating.

With three separate phases of heat exchange (ground to water; water to Freon; Freon to air or water), the use of a ground-source (geothermal) heat pump to heat and cool your home may not, at first blush Adv. 1. at first blush - as a first impression; "at first blush the offer seemed attractive"
when first seen
, appear to be a very efficient process. But in fact it is extremely efficient--right in the neighborhood of 400 percent. This means that the ground surrenders 4 units of heat energy for every I unit of electrical energy you use to extract it. It's almost like stealing.

Types of systems

There are two basic types of underground pipe systems--open loop and closed loop--with several variations. The one you use will depend on where you live, how much land you have, and the characteristics of the soil and ground water.

Closed loop

In a horizontal closed-loop system Noun 1. closed-loop system - a control system with a feedback loop that is active
closed loop

control system - a system for controlling the operation of another system
, loops of special heat-conducting polyethylene pipe are buried in a series of three-foot-wide trenches six to eight feet below the surface. The length of each trench depends on the amount of moisture in the soil. David Petroy, owner of Blue Sky Energy Solutions in Boulder, Colorado The City of Boulder (, Mountain Time Zone) is a home rule municipality located in Boulder County, Colorado, United States. Boulder is the 11th most populous city in the State of Colorado, as well as the most populous city and the county  (www. bluesky-energy.com), has found that three trenches, each 100 feet long, will be sufficient for an average-sized house in saturated soil, though in Colorado's dry climate he most often has to go 200 feet per trench for optimal heat absorption.

Since many of us simply don't have enough land for such a sprawling system, David frequently uses a vertical closed-loop system, in which loops of 3/4-inch high-density polyethylene high-density polyethylene
n. Abbr. HDPE
A strong, relatively opaque form of polyethylene having a dense structure with few side branches off the main carbon backbone.
 pipe are set in concrete in a series of 4-1/2-inch holes. The holes are bored to a depth of 175 to 220 feet, and placed 10 to 15 feet apart. All the separate pipes converge at a manifold, where they are joined into two pipes--one in, one out.

A third incarnation of the closed-loop system is the pond loop. As the name implies, the tubing is floated over a body of water, then sunk to the bottom. If you're lucky enough to have a lake nearby, it could spare you the cost of trenching or drilling.

Open loop

In open-loop systems, ground water from a series of wells is used. Water is pumped out of one set of wells, run through a heat exchanger, and is then pumped back into a different set of wells. Since water conducts heat better than dirt, open-loop systems are very efficient and can be less expensive to install than vertical closed loops.

System size, cost and applicability

In a temperate climate, a geothermal system will heat and cool roughly 750 square feet of space per each ton of capacity (12,000 Btu/hour). Installed systems range from $3,000 per ton for horizontal closed-loop systems in ideal soil, to $5,000 per ton for vertical closed-loop systems. If, on the other hand, you have adequate groundwater flow, vertical open-loop systems can save you money.

Are you building a new house? If so, the increase in your mortgage payment from choosing a ground-source heat-pump system over a conventional system will be more than offset by the savings on your utility bill, since a geothermal system will be 2-1/2 to three times more efficient. If you instead plan to retrofit an existing house, the payback will take 10 to 15 years, depending on numerous factors. The good news is, the equipment should last for 20 to 30 years with little maintenance, while the underground tubing will perform trouble-free for at least 100 years.

Practically speaking, ground-source heat pumps work best with forced-air heating systems, but can also work well with radiant-floor heating systems. When adapted to an existing forced-air setup, the system efficiency can be greatly augmented by sealing gaps and holes in the ducts, adding return-air ducts, and setting up multiple zones. With the addition of a desuper water heater, you can enjoy virtually-free hot water in summer and more efficient water heating Water heating is a thermodynamic process using an energy source to heat water above its initial temperature. Typical domestic uses of hot water are for cooking, cleaning, bathing, and space heating. In industry both hot water and water heated to steam have many uses.  in winter.

When installed as a hot-water heating system Hot-water heating system

A heating system for a building in which the heat-conveying medium is hot water. A hot-water heating system consists essentially of water-heating or -cooling means and of heat-emitting means such as radiators, convectors, baseboard
 for radiant in-floor heating, a geothermal system can only heat water to 110-120 degrees, so for most homes it will require some amount of boiler-heated water on really cold days, though overall it should handle 80 to 90 percent of the heating chores over the course of a winter. Summer cooling with ground-source hot-water systems is accomplished by reversing the process. The heat pump unit produces cold water which is circulated to fan coil units which blow air past the cool coils. The cool air is then distributed through a separate duct system.

Want to do something good for both the planet and your pocketbook? According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid.

EPA
abbr.
eicosapentaenoic acid


EPA,
n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic.

EPA,
n.
, geothermal systems are the most energy-efficient, environmentally clean, and cost-effective space conditioning systems available. To learn more about geothermal heating Geothermal heating has been used since Roman times as a way of heating buildings and spas by utilizing sources of hot water and hot steam that exist near the earth's surface.  and cooling, or to find a certified installer near you, visit the GeoExchange web site at: www. geoexchange.org.

REX REX - The original name for Restructured EXtended eXecutor.  A. EWING

COLORADO

Rex Ewing is the author of several renewable energy Renewable energy utilizes natural resources such as sunlight, wind, tides and geothermal heat, which are naturally replenished. Renewable energy technologies range from solar power, wind power, and hydroelectricity to biomass and biofuels for transportation.  books, including Power With Nature, Got Sun? Go Solar, and Hydrogen: Hot Stuff--Cool Science. He lives with his wife, LaVonne, in a handcrafted hand·craft  
n.
Variant of handicraft.

tr.v. hand·craft·ed, hand·craft·ing, hand·crafts
To fashion or make by hand.



hand·craft
 log home powered solely by the sun and wind in the foothills of Colorado. His books can be purchased at the Countryside Bookstore (see page 59).
COPYRIGHT 2006 Countryside Publications Ltd.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

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Title Annotation:Life on the sunny side
Author:Ewing, Rex A.
Publication:Countryside & Small Stock Journal
Date:May 1, 2006
Words:1416
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