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BPA RTU Winter Operation Presented to: RTUG August 2010. Presented by: Kathryn Hile, The Cadmus Group Howard Reichmuth, New Buildings Institute. Winter Analysis Overview. Improvements to analysis template Downloading and organizing data Fan operation – schedules Gas pack operation
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BPA RTU Winter OperationPresented to:RTUGAugust 2010 Presented by: Kathryn Hile, The Cadmus Group Howard Reichmuth, New Buildings Institute
Winter Analysis Overview • Improvements to analysis template • Downloading and organizing data • Fan operation – schedules • Gas pack operation • Heat pump operation • Winter economizing (or cooling) • Additional opportunities • Lessons learned
Winter Sample • 45 serviced RTUs • 32 at 3 sites in Puget Sound area • 13 at 3 sites in Tri-Cities area • 4 baseline RTUs in Tri-Cities: serviced spring 2010
Analysis Template Improvements • All winter data in one spreadsheet (at hour level) • Much smaller analysis files • Automation with SAS and VBA • Time series dynamic graph • Both SA min and SA max plotted in time series
Downloading and Cleaning Data • HOBOlink • Visual Basic • SAS • Excel
Data Preparation Process • Download zip file from HOBOlink with data from all HOBOs • Organize by HOBO • Create one file for each HOBO, based on power, one sheet for each two-week period • Import to SAS with keys for CT size, WattNode scale factor, fan low and fan high
Data Preparation • Calculate hourly and daily minimums, maximums, totals and averages • Export to Excel • Only full 24 hour days used to create energy signature • View data in hourly compressor map, dynamic time series and energy signature
Data Collection Issues • Some (not many) sensors failed last winter, and four sites required troubleshooting to fix • Splitters • AC adapter – battery failure • Downloaded data • One site: two units had nonsensical data • One site: three sensors just disappeared from HOBOlink – result of the AT&T upgrades last fall?
Winter Operation • Schedules – fan ON or AUTO • Fan kW, duty, base load • Typical signatures
Fan Mode = ON • Winter numbers similar to pilot data
Fan Mode = AUTO • Small sample • Fan kW very close; fan duty and base load differed
Gas Pack Signatures • 24 of 32 energy signatures were as expected • 8 needed more investigation to understand performance
Gas Pack Typical Signature 1 • Operates same set schedule each day
Gas Pack Compressor Map • Same RTU as previous slide
Gas Pack Typical Signature 2 • Operates slightly longer at lower temperatures
Compressor Map • Same RTU, compressor map
Gas Pack Typical Signature 3 • Two signatures – Monday – Saturday, and Sunday • Unit may have reached setback temperatures when average daily temperatures below 40
Gas Pack Findings • Fanpower calculated this winter was close to metered pilot data in almost all cases • Fanduty was close to metered pilot data in units with fan scheduled ON • Fanduty and base load were difficult to predict from summer metered data when fan ran in AUTO mode
Winter Heat Pump Operation • Heat pumps were trickier • Smaller sample, all at a notorious site • Units served either offices or fabrication (manufacturing) spaces • Four units did not have economizers
Heat Pump Typical Operation • Energy increases as temperatures decrease • Steeper slope than for cooling
Heat Pump Compressor Map • Same unit as previous slide
Heat Pump Findings • Typical heat pumps will have a second sloped line • Need summer data (spring was not warm enough) to connect winter and summer usage • Will use that to calculate and predict total annual energy use, not just cooling and fan
Winter Economizing • Some units modulate dampers to take advantage of free cooling. • SA min and SA max track OAT • Three speed fan?
Heating to Economizing • Fan operates at different power when heating or economizing
Atypical Performance • Balance point below the range of monitored temperatures • Cooling at low temperatures • Units serving the same space • Two units with bad data
Cooling at Low Temperatures • Mechanical cooling at 25 degrees
Heating a.m., Cooling p.m. • Two different max kW, at 3.5 kW, cooling (SA min at 55) and heating 4.5 kW (SA max at 90)
Economizer Findings • Cooling at temperatures below 40 degrees. Why? Controls? Or dampers didn’t modulate because broken? Bad sensor? Comments? Significant savings opportunity? • Cooling in the 50-60 degree F. Could economizer changeover temperature be increased for additional savings? • Winter is a good (better than summer?) candidate for economizer savings
Preliminary Annual Signature • Winter: • Standard, flat gas pack • Standard, sloped – but could we just take an average and keep slope at 0? • Gas pack with two occupancy schedules • Heat pump – is this signature messier than it would be during summer cooling? TBD. • Atypical.
Next Steps in Research • Draft annualized savings methodology with separate characterizations of annual operation for summer and winter • Data block interval analysis • Recommendations regarding fan schedule persistence • Additional persistence analysis • Measure life implications from the data • Updated M&V protocol recommendations
Web-Enabled Thermostats • Test the web-enabled thermostat as an M&V tool as a substitute for data-loggers • Data-friendliness? • How complete is it? • What does it look like? • Use the current analysis protocol and modify it for these data