Applications and Efficiency of Heat Pump Systems Proceedings of the 4th International Conference (Munich, Germany 1–3 October 1990)

The papers in this collection have originated from Britain, Eastern and Western Europe and India, with the delegates coming from fifteen countries, including a strong contingent from Japan. This indicates a widespread interest in the application of heat pumps. The heat pump suffers from an environme...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Smith, Ian E. (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Berlin, Heidelberg Springer Berlin Heidelberg 1991, 1991
Edition:1st ed. 1991
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer Book Archives -2004 - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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245 0 0 |a Applications and Efficiency of Heat Pump Systems  |h Elektronische Ressource  |b Proceedings of the 4th International Conference (Munich, Germany 1–3 October 1990)  |c edited by Ian E. Smith 
250 |a 1st ed. 1991 
260 |a Berlin, Heidelberg  |b Springer Berlin Heidelberg  |c 1991, 1991 
300 |a VI, 189 p. 89 illus  |b online resource 
505 0 |a System design -- Design of a Vapour Compression Heat Pump in a Heat Exchanger Network -- Process Integration of Various types of Heat Pump -- Experimental Hybrid Heat Pump of 1000kW heating capacity -- A ‘Self-Regulating’ Heat Pump for Renewable Energy Applications -- Experimental Results of a Double-Lift Compression-Absorption Heat Pump -- The Compression-Absorption Cycle: A High-Temperature Application -- Working fluids and CFC replacements -- CFC Alternatives for High-Temperature Heat Pump Applications -- Prediction of Thermodynamic Properties of CFC Mixtures using the CCOR Equation of State -- Ethylchloride: A Viable Alternative for Medium and High-Temperature Compression Heat Pump Cycles -- Applications for heat pumps -- Potential for MVR in Indian Distilleries -- High-Temperature Process Drying with Hybrid Desiccant-Heat Pumps Systems -- Heat Pumps for Heating and Cooling of Hotels -- Thermodynamic Gestion and Thermal Comfort in a Solar TV Complex Building in Brussels: First Results -- An Open Cycle Absorption Heat Pump: A System for Drying Agricultural Products -- Heat Pumps with Different Energy Collectors in Army Barracks (Volkach, Germany): Results from Three Heating Seasons (1986–1989) -- Predictive Control of a Hybrid Heating System Including a Heat Pump -- Feeding Large Heat Pumps from Sewage Water Treatment Plants 
653 |a Atmospheric Protection/Air Quality Control/Air Pollution 
653 |a Engineering, Architectural 
653 |a Building Construction and Design 
653 |a Building 
653 |a Energy systems 
653 |a Buildings—Design and construction 
653 |a Waste Water Technology / Water Pollution Control / Water Management / Aquatic Pollution 
653 |a Construction 
653 |a Water pollution 
653 |a Air pollution 
653 |a Energy Systems 
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520 |a The papers in this collection have originated from Britain, Eastern and Western Europe and India, with the delegates coming from fifteen countries, including a strong contingent from Japan. This indicates a widespread interest in the application of heat pumps. The heat pump suffers from an environmental dichotomy. On the one hand it saves fossil fuel energy, thereby reducing CO emissions. On the other hand, in the vapour compression form, 2 it generally employs CFCs which are destructive to our protective ozone layer as well as contributing to the greenhouse effect. Taking the first, heat pumps, perhaps have the widest application numerically in the heating (and cooling) of buildings and an excellent paper describes case studies concerning three large Norwegian hotels. In these, heat was pumped from the adjacent river or sea when heating was required, and during the summer, when cooling became necessary, to generate domestic hot water. The heat pumps were installed by SINTEF Refrigeration Engineering, Norway, and have demonstrated payback periods of about two years. The fractional total energy saving of the three hotels was 30% as a result, an impressive figure, indeed. A similar paper by a Belgian architectural consortium shows how this technique can be successfully applied to the cooling of a large television complex where considerable quantities of heat were being generated by the luminaries. In this exercise the cooling load was successfully pumped to provide hot water