Home Improvement Help and Maintenance Tips:
Heat Pumps Explained
Forced
air systems with central air-conditioning, or a heat pump,
consist of two parts: a unit onside and the other outside of
the home. Forced air units consist of ducts that distribute
the conditioned air through the house and a fan to help this
process. Attached to the duct system is some type of furnace
or air-handler, where the blower fan is located. At the
furnace or air-handler in the ductwork is an evaporator coil
that all the air blows through before it is distributed to
the house. Two small refrigerant lines come from the coil
and go outside to the compressor. The compressor is in
either the air-conditioner or the heat pump unit, depending
on which one you have. The outside unit has the compressor
on the inside; surrounding the compressor is a condenser
coil (it looks like a radiator). In this unit, a fan blows
on the coil to extract the heat it produces.
It
seems as though an air conditioner cools your home’s air; it
actually removes heat from the indoor air and transfers that
heat to the outdoor air. Heat is extracted from the home by
passing indoor air across the evaporator coil in the indoor
unit. The refrigerant lines then carry the heat to the
outdoor unit to the condenser coil where it is released into
the outside air. The cooling cycle continues until the
indoor temperature reaches the thermostat setting. So in the
cooling process, the coil on the inside of the house is
cold, and the coil on the outside of the house is hot.
A heat
pump works exactly like an air-conditioner in the cooling
mode. It extracts heat from inside the home and transfers it
to the outdoor air. The difference comes in the heating
cycle. A heat pump has a reversing valve that reverses the
process; in the heating mode, the unit collects heat from
the outdoor air and transfers it to your home’s interior. In
the heating process, the coil on the inside of the house is
hot, and the coil on the outside of the house is cool. Even
when the air outside feels cold, the air still contains some
heat. The heat pump extracts the heat from this cold outdoor
air and sends it inside to warm your home. In below freezing
conditions, there may not be enough heat in the outside air
to meet the demand of the thermostat setting, so an electric
heater strip in the indoor unit helps make up the difference
to warm your house.
You
may here different terms when it comes to rating cooling or
heating. Most air conditioners have their capacity rated in
BTUs (British thermal units). Your central air-conditioner
may be rated in “tons”; in heating and cooling terms this
rating translates to 12,000 BTU per one ton.
In
cooling systems, you will hear the term “SEER” (Seasonal
Energy Efficiency Ratio). The higher the SEER rating, the
less your unit will cost to operate. For example a 10 SEER
unit is less efficient than a 15 SEER unit. |