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University of Dayton Industrial Assessment Center. Kelly Kissock, Ph.D., P.E. Professor and Chair, Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering / Renewable and Clean Energy Director: University of Dayton Industrial Assessment Center. Industrial Assessment Center Program.
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University of DaytonIndustrial Assessment Center Kelly Kissock, Ph.D., P.E. Professor and Chair, Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering / Renewable and Clean EnergyDirector: University of Dayton Industrial Assessment Center
Industrial Assessment Center Program • Sponsored by U.S. Department of Energy • Program began during 1970s “energy crisis” • 26 centers at universities throughout the U.S. • 20 no-cost assessments per year for mid-sized industries • Goals: • Help industry be more resource-efficient and competitive • Train new engineers in industrial best-practices
Eligibility for No-Cost IAC Assessment • Manufacturing facility SIC: 20 to 39 • Annual energy costs: $100,000 - $2,500,000
Other Assistance to Industry from D.O.E. • Save Energy Now program • http://www1.eere.energy.gov/industry/saveenergynow/ • D.O.E. Software Tools • Screening: Quick PEP • Process heating: PHAST • Compressed Air: Air Master • Pumps: PSAT • Steam: SSAT • Motors: Motor Master • General training on D.O.E. software tools • 1 to 3 day seminars on D.O.E. tools • Energy Saving Assessments • 3-day assessment of specific energy system • Includes training on use of D.O.E. software tool
IAC Assessment • Gather and analyze data before visit • Team of faculty and students visit plant for one day • Work closely with clients to: • Reduce energy • Reduce waste • Improve productivity • Write custom, confidential, independent report with specific savings suggestions • Call back to see what was implemented
UD Industrial Assessment Center • Performed over 800 assessments since 1981 • Check implementation results after one year • Half of recommendations implemented < 2 year • Average implemented savings: >$100,000 per year
UD-IAC Energy Assessment Approach • Develop Baseline • Billing analysis: how energy is priced • Energy balance: where energy is used • Lean energy analysis: why energy use changes • Identify and Quantify Savings Opportunities • Integrated Systems and Principals Approach to Identifying Savings • Consider relevant energy systems (elect, lights, motors, fluid flow, compressed air, steam, process heating and cooling, HVAC) • Apply principals of energy efficiency (inside out, control efficiency, counter flow, etc.) • Use engineering fundamentals and fundamental-based software to quantify savings • Measure and Benchmark • Measurement: extend LEA with sliding NAC and EI to measure energy efficiency improvement • Benchmarking: compare NAC and EI for inter-facility benchmarking
Baseline: Utility Bill Analysis • Analyze rate schedule • Verify billing amounts • Check for saving opportunities: • Primary/secondary • Power factor correction • Meter consolidation • Demand reduction potential • Benchmark costs
Baseline: Lean Energy Analysis • Model energy use as functions of weather and production • E = a + b T + c P • G = a + b T + c P • Use models for: • Measuring savings • Budgeting • LEA Breakdown • Benchmarking • Identifying Savings Opportunities
LEA: High ScatterIdentifies Control Opportunities Heating Energy Varies by 3X at Same Temp!
LEA: Departure From Expected Shape Identifies Malfunctioning Economizers • Air conditioning electricity use should flatten below 50 F • Audit found malfunctioning economizers
Energy Systems Electrical Lighting Motor drive Fluid flow Compressed air Steam and hot water Process heating Process cooling Heating, ventilating and air conditioning Cogeneration Renewable Energy
Principles of Energy Efficiency Inside Out Analysis Understand Control Efficiency Think Counter-flow Avoid Mixing Match Source Energy to End Use Whole-system, Whole-time Frame Analysis
P-1: Think ‘Inside-out’ Result: Significant improvement at minimal cost
P-2:Understand Control Efficiency (Systems sized for peak but operate at part-load)
P-3:Think Counter Flow T Q Parallel Flow x T Q Counter Flow x
P-4:Avoid Mixing Availability analysis… Useful work destroyed with mixing Examples CAV/VAV air handlers Separate hot and cold wells Material reuse/recycling
P-6: Whole System/Timeframe Design Dopt = 200 mm when Tot Cost = NPV(Energy)+Pipe Dopt = 250 mm when Cost= NPV(Energy)+Pipe+Pump Energy250 = Energy200 / 2
Integrated Systems + Principles Approach • Effective and Thorough
State of the Art Equipment • Power logging • Ultrasonic flow sensors • Ultrasonic vibration • Combustion analysis • Temperature, light, pressure, air flow, etc.
Lighting • End Use • Turn off blocked light • Occupancy sensors • Maximize day-lighting • Distribution • Add reflectors • Task Lighting • White ceilings / walls • Conversion • Upgrade fixtures
Motor Drive Systems • End Use • Turn off when not in use • Distribution • Smooth to notched V-Belts • Conversion • Replace rather than rewind • Right-size motors
Compressed Air Systems • End Use • Eliminate inappropriate uses • Air saver nozzles • Distribution • Fix leaks • Timed to demand control drains • Conversion • Reduce Pressure • Efficient control • Compress outdoor air • Properly stage • Adequate storage • Reclaim heat to space
Fluid Flow • End Use • Decrease head • Pump slower/longer • Distribution • Reduce friction • Conversion • Trim impellor / slow fan • VFDs for variable flow
Process Heating • End Use • Insulate hot surfaces • Block radiation • Minimize infiltration • Reduce cooling losses • Reduce conveyor losses • Reduce batch losses • Distribution • Counter flow heat exchange • Conversion • Reduce excess combustion air • Pre-heat combustion air or load • Cascade waste heat
Boiler / Steam Systems • End Use • Insulate hot surfaces • Cover open tanks • Distribution • Repair failed steam traps • Conversion • Reduce excess combustion air • Pre-heat combustion air or feed-water • Minimize steam pressure • Reduce blow-down • Modulation control • Add O2 trim control
Process Cooling • End Use • Insulate cold surfaces • Increase HX effectiveness • Pinch analysis • Distribution • Avoid mixing • Conversion • Utilized most efficient cooling process • Properly stage chillers • VFDs on CT fans
Heating Ventilating and Air Conditioning • End Use • Reduce set-points • Reduce infiltration/ventilation • Insulate un-insulated envelope • Distribution • Reduce temp stratification • Radiant heaters • Conversion • Reclaim heat from process • 100% efficient MAU for ventilation • Differential pressure control for MAUs • Outdoor air economizers
Measurement and Benchmarking • Measurement • Extend LEA with sliding NAC and EI to measure energy efficiency improvement • Benchmarking • Compare NAC and EI for inter-facility benchmarking
Measure: Extend LEA by Calculating Sliding Normalized Annual Consumption (NAC) • AC up by 10% • NAC down by 12%
Free Energy Analysis Software • ESim • HeatSim • CoolSim • AirSim • LightSim • ETracker
UD-IAC Alumni • McDonough-Braungart • Johnson Controls • Honeywell • Energy Resource Solutions • 2RW Consulting • Select Energy Services • Heapy • Go Sustainable Energy • And many more…
Awards • U.S. DOE 2003 Center of Excellence • State of Ohio 2006 Governor’s Award for Excellence in Energy • U.S. DOE Energy Champion Awards to UD-IAC Clients
Interested? Dr. Kelly Kissock 937-229-2852 kkissock@udayton.edu Franc Sever 937-229-3343 severfrj@notes.udayton.edu http://academic.udayton.edu/kissock/http/IAC