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Efficiency and Capacity Performance of a Stirling-Cycle Water-to-Water Heat Pump...

by Stephen P Kowalski, Ahmed G Abuheiba, Rusty Jewett, Kyle R Gluesenkamp, Kashif Nawaz
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Book Title
ASHRAE Transactions
Publication Date
Conference Name
ASHRAE Annual Conference
Conference Location
Toronto, Canada
Conference Sponsor
American Society of Heating, Refrigeration, and Air-conditioning Engineers
Conference Date
-

The performance of a 10 kW (2.8 ton) heat pump has been modeled in preparation for evaluation in a controlled-atmosphere psychrometric facility. The heat pump uses an electrically driven Stirling engine with nitrogen as a working fluid. The appropriate standards for testing are ANSI/AHRI/ASHRAE ISO Standard 13256-2:1998 (RA 2012), Water-Source Heat Pumps—Testing and Rating for Performance—Part 2: Water-to-Water and Brine-to-Water Heat Pumps. The heating and cooling efficiency and capacity of the device has been modeled at different hot and cold sink temperatures spanning a wide range of possible operating conditions. The heat pump was designed for a seasonal efficiency energy ratio (SEER) of 22. The high efficiency of this product coupled with the use of nitrogen as a working fluid makes it an important tool for the decarbonization of residential, commercial, and industrial HVAC&R applications.