1 / 24

Metrics That Matter: Energy Efficiency in Laboratories

Metrics That Matter: Energy Efficiency in Laboratories. Pam Greenley MIT EHS Associate Director greenley@mit.edu. Steve Lanou MIT Deputy Director, Sustainability slanou@mit.edu. Intro. What Does Campus Sustainability Mean at MIT?. Minimizing our campus energy and environmental footprint

walter-hyde
Download Presentation

Metrics That Matter: Energy Efficiency in Laboratories

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Metrics That Matter:Energy Efficiency in Laboratories Pam Greenley MIT EHS Associate Director greenley@mit.edu Steve Lanou MIT Deputy Director, Sustainability slanou@mit.edu

  2. Intro

  3. What Does Campus Sustainability Mean at MIT? Minimizing our campus energy and environmental footprint Building and supporting a local community Leading by example – sharing results Creating a learning laboratory – “mens et manus” Enabling and facilitating community aspirations

  4. Translating Sustainability Into Action Power Production Conservation & Efficiency Sustainable Design Transportation & Operations Community Engagement Educational Opportunities Waste, Recycling & Composting

  5. Current Metrics of “Sustainability”

  6. Current Metrics of “Sustainability”

  7. Energy Efficiency Success to Date Utilities purchased for FY12 $30M = < 3% of overall operating budget Cumulative Energy Savings

  8. You can’t build your way out

  9. Building 18: Collaborative Experimentation

  10. Reduce Fume Hood Face Velocity Building-Wide • Worked collaboratively with EHS experts to determine appropriate optimization of safety and efficiency • Collaborated with leading faculty and researchers • Tested range of face velocity rates • Consensus rate of 80 feet per minute rate identified • Recalibrated 130 hoods in Building 18 to 80 fpm from 100 • Building control software modified • Air control valves reset • Air diffusers adjusted and relocated • Certified all hoods to ASHRE 110 standard • Results • Cost: $306,000 • Estimated Annual Savings: $162,000 • Simple Payback: 2 years • Performance monitored via Cimetrics system • Reduced rate now used in new facilities

  11. Four Types of Projects for EHS Involvement • New Lab Buildings – Koch Institute • Single Principle Investigator lab renovation • Existing lab building energy conservation project • Supervising undergraduate research projects

  12. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research • Research Mission – Integrating biological investigation with engineering technology • 40 laboratories, 500 researchers • 180,000 sq ft of research and work space • 100 hoods, x bsc’s • 30% less HVAC energy use/ LEED Gold

  13. Koch Institute Design Process • EHS brought in early • Facilities and EHS agreed to approaches • Type of hoods • Type of controls • Face Velocity • Duct Velocity • Heat Recovery • Challenged rules of thumb Using existing labs to confirm plug load

  14. Final Lab Ventilation Design • EHS related considerations • VAV and CV hoods • 80 fpm, 18-inch sash height (60 in future) • Occupied 6 ACH or hood min • Unoccupied 4 ACH or hood min • Heat pipe for heat recovery • Picture or this?Other Important EC • ACH driven by heat load(5 plug ,1 lighting w/ft2) • Low duct velocity , 1200 vs 2000 feet per minute • Segregation of freezers • Cascading air from offices to labs • Chilled beams in offices

  15. Koch Institute Lessons Learned To Date • Researchers questioned containment of quiet hoods • “Offices” in Labs • Occupancy sensors need fine tuning

  16. Continuation of Program • [Green Team • Ongoing Education of researchers]

  17. Comprehensive Stewardship Group

  18. Comprehensive Stewardship Group

  19. Comprehensive Stewardship Group

  20. The Perfect Lab Energy Conservation Project – Existing Building • Common Goals • Increase energy and material use efficiency • Safer Labs (appropriate ventilaiton) • More engaged and educated lab occupants • Increased Comfort and productivity • Lab level energy use info provided real time • They understand how their lab ventilation system works.

  21. Process Steps- Existing Lab Commis-sioning

More Related