Seeking Engineer for Off-Grid Religious Facility Heating in the Mountain States
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It's a small point to add, but in building a gravity driven hot water system for my house, I used modified wax filled greenhouse window operators to maintain thermostatic control. They close down modified ball valves as things warm up. It is a non-electric way of getting an even temperature.
Yours, Larry
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I think a two-pipe district steam might be the easy way. The boilers can be in an outbuilding, depending on how your customer feels, you might be able get away with modern controls in the outbuilding, and TRVs or manual controls in the main buildings. Even if that's not viable, consolidating the boilers in one location should make managing them easier. Or orifices in the radiators and manage the output by controlling pressure. Might even be able to find a steam-powered vacuum pump for a vapor system.
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Yeah, I seem to recall see old gravity systems with a big tank in the attic, open to the air. Served as both an expansion tank and a buffer tank.
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The main blogs are said to be 11k sf, there’s no mention of the lay out. Is it one big room? Two?
While there is the issue of space & DHW heating, there needs to be a conversation about building materials and insulation.
I believe the ancient Romans built the steam heat right into the stone/ masonry walls of their buildings ? I just saw an add for clay brick building blocks boasting an R value of 52 and could be built 11 stories high with concrete floors.
While this may seem humorous, it is not meant to be disrespectful: Remember the Branch Davidians. They were doing fine until the fire broke out. Build smart from the ground up.0 -
Time for a mental reset.
Gravity hot water, once installed PROPERLY , is elegant.
It is ideal for a solid fuel heating system. The simpler am more old timey the better , including the open system design.
One of the elegant features is that because it is temperature difference that drives the system the coldest room draws the most water from the system until that room is warm, then the preference moves to the next coldest radiator.
Another elegant feature is that the large thermal mass in water and radiation makes for very slow and flat bounces in the temperature.
The only disadvantages come with sudden need for more heat and having to tend the fire.
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If the client was willing to have multiple gravity furnaces/chimneys within the building, do you think that there would be additional issues with using the gravity furnaces? I can imagine potentially approaching the heating of the large building like a series of co-joined buildings.
And yes, heating the ventilation air will be another significant challenge.
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The beauty of gravity hot water is the energy density of the heating medium, so in theory you could heat an entire 11,000 sf building with just one properly-sized boiler and distribution system consisting mainly of water pipes of reasonable size.
By contrast, air has much less energy density, so your distribution system needs much larger cross-sectional area vs. water pipes. Very large ducts, especially since you're relying on gravity, with no blower systems. So now your ductwork is taking up quite a large amount of your interior space.
To put it in numbers, you would need over 3000 cubic feet of air to carry the same number of BTU's as 1 cubic foot of water, assuming the same delta T. That is a massive difference that has major implications for the entire interior design of the building. Assuming the same flow rate in linear feet per second, that means an air duct would need to be over 25 feet by 25 feet square , or the size of a large living room, to carry the same number of BTU's as the water in one 6-inch pipe.
And the low energy density of air also means you have very little buffering effect. As soon as you stop heating the air, interior temperature falls quickly. Whereas the thermal mass of the water holds the heat and releases it slowly, so the stored energy in the water continues heating the building for hours after the boiler stops firing.
And then you add the compexity of having to manage the firing of multiple air heating units distributed throughout the building, vs having just one boiler to manage in the case of hot water heating.
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This.
Trying to squeeze the best out of a Weil-McLain JB-5 running a 1912 1 pipe system.0 -
Yep. Poroton structural tile. Awesome stuff. Cousin in Germany built his new house using it and couldn't be happier. Place is a fortress. Link to manufacturers below. Juwo and Wienerberger are the big ones
They have a US distributor in Wyoming.
Trying to squeeze the best out of a Weil-McLain JB-5 running a 1912 1 pipe system.0 -
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I did preliminary work on this project a few years ago. We were talking about hydronic radiant floor heat and utilizing PV powered circulators (With battery backup) that were mounted outside the facility. We also talked of using a wood gasification boiler to utilize all of the beetle kill pine. I am happy to discuss our initial design ideas, and to see if we can be of any help! Ferguson Hydronics 303-942-8102
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With district steam they'd only need 24v at the boiler house for controls. Way smaller load than pumps of any sort. if the land has a slope they may be able to do gravity condensate return.
If in the building, with no electricity allowed, better to do gravity HW . There are a number of thermostatic damper controls for wood fired HW boilers on the market.
Gravity air is really a non-starter.
Trying to squeeze the best out of a Weil-McLain JB-5 running a 1912 1 pipe system.0 -
Definitely. That's a lot of sq ft to easily have a battery and inverter setup if needed. Ecm circulator wouldn't even need to be on site. Could be piped in from outside the building in it's own heating barn. That would also make remote controls possible even without local thermostats. A lot of math but definitely not hard to maintain 50 degree indoor temps when a outdoor reset type control with PV and battery power...
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VENTILATION: I once saw an old school in Chicopee, MA that used steam piping in a chimney structure to provide ventilation - sort of a "whole building" fan idea with 5 rows of 2.5" piping around the inside of the 6x6 "chimney", heating air drawn in by infiltration which then rose and exhausted the building…Not the most efficient but it worked!
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Someone up there — I was scrolling through, so I didn't note the name — mentioned gracity hot air in walls and floors, and that the Romans used the principle (quite true — they called it a hypocaust) and that it is also used in some buildings and homes in Europe. All quite true, and it works well. It also works in the southern parts of England (where the Romans, again, used it) and, after a fashion, even as far north as Durham.
Problem. The climate in those areas is considerably warmer in the colder months than it is in the mountain states of the US which is where, I believe, this is being proposed. This is not to say you can't do it, but it would be much more difficult than in, say, Devon or Cornwall — where you can grow tropical plants outdoors all year round…
Br. Jamie, osb
Building superintendent/caretaker, 7200 sq. ft. historic house museum with dependencies in New England0 -
That story reminds me of an innovative office building in Zimbabwe that was designed to mimic the passive ventilation in termite mounds, which have a central "stack" through which warmed air rises, and the termites regulate the temperature by digging vents at the base of the mound to admit varying amounts of air.
The office building design is more complicated and does involve fans and electricity, but the principle is similar. The building has 48 air stacks on the roof through which building air is expelled, after it passes through the hollow floors of the building and is distributed through the office spaces. The building mass also serves as a thermal battery, so that the cool night air cools the building's interior mass, which then absorbs the heat from the warmer daytime air during working hours. The building has no air conditioners and relies only on this passive cooling.
https://www.mickpearce.com/Eastgate.html
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Assuming this job will require plumbing and mechanical permits, inspections and code compliant design? You would be well served to have someone like Dennis, that is local, familiar with the climate, has many proven designs in operations, as well as knowing the local AHJs.
Bob "hot rod" Rohr
trainer for Caleffi NA
Living the hydronic dream0 -
Mebbe, if Dennis is comfortable with the type of system required. Definitely not your usual duck.
Trying to squeeze the best out of a Weil-McLain JB-5 running a 1912 1 pipe system.0 -
Some creative architecture that integrates passive ventilation, passive heating and cooling, and smart use of thermal mass and glazing, is definitely called for. If you can get that right in a way that minimizes the demands for active heating and ventilation, that may be the key to success, moreso than the heating system itself.
The Eastgate complex in Zimbabwe is obviously way out of scale for this project, but it does show how "form follows function" out-of-the-box thinking about the structure itself can help minimize the need for active mechanical systems.
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"Some creative architecture that integrates passive ventilation, passive heating and cooling, and smart use of thermal mass and glazing, is definitely called for."
I've never seen a building that claimed to use "thermal mass" that was actually engineered. As in, here's a predictive, quantitative model that we'll use to map out the performance of the building and guide our choices of materials and their quantities. There have been plenty of buildings that attempt to use "thermal mass" and passive solar guided by guesswork. The results tend to be exactly what you would expect from guesswork.
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I don't doubt that many residential projects, and possibly commercial ones, have relied more on guesswork than actual engineering re thermal mass. But the Eastgate project I linked to above did have actual engineering done on the thermal mass, because it was so critical to the building's passive cooling performance. Ove Arup & Partners did the engineering in advance to predict the building's performance, and according to the architect the finished building got pretty close to the predicted performance. You can see some of the data graphs on the architect's website:
That was a big multi-million dollar project whose success depended largely on the performance of the passive cooling system involving thermal mass, so no doubt they put quite a lot of $$ into the up-front engineering. The clients for the religious compound being discussed here may not have that kind of budget, but there's no reason that some intelligent engineering of thermal mass in the design phase couldn't be done on a smaller scale. Simpler elements like Trombe walls are well-understood and not that hard to model.
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The passive solar houses and other structures my late father0in-law and I did back forty plus years ago were completely engineered, including thermal mass effects. A couple of the early ones we didn't get quite right, but later we usually came pretty close. Architecture wasn't our thing, so we worked mostly the The Architects Collaborative or Mies van der Rohe on that.
Br. Jamie, osb
Building superintendent/caretaker, 7200 sq. ft. historic house museum with dependencies in New England2 -
OK, what are the units of thermal mass?
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I know that question was directed at Jamie, but I'll offer a few thoughts.
An electrical analogue of thermal mass is, say, a rechargeable battery. A rechargeable battery can store a given number of amp-hours, as a "thermal mass" like a drum full of water can store a certain number of BTU's for a given delta T. So the BTU storage capacity of, say, a drum full of water is:
BTU's stored = Mass x specific heat capacity (BTU/unit mass/degree F) x delta T (degrees F)
So that's the first "unit" of "thermal mass," its total BTU storage capacity.
And the rechargeable battery can supply that stored charge at a certain rate, in units of amperes, which is Coulombs/second. Just as the drum full of water can release those stored BTU's at a certain rate, which will depend on a number of factors including surface area of the drum, emissivity, convective airflow, delta T, etc. So the release rate is not as easy to determine as the discharge rate of a battery, but the analogy is there.
So the second "unit" of thermal mass is the release rate in BTU's/unit time, which will depend on a number of factors.
The third "unit" is the rate at which the mass can absorb BTU's, which again will depend on a numer of factors.
So that's all we would care about for a given "thermal mass:"
- How many BTU's it can store
- The rate at which those BTU's are released
- The rate at which it absorbs BTU's (from the sun, etc)
The first is easily calculated. The other two are more difficult, but can be derived from known heat transfer laws. And the basic units are BTU's stored per unit mass, and the rate of BTU release or absorption.
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The thermal mass of an amount of material is, fundamentally, the specific heat of the material (for instance: water is 1 BTU per degree F per pound) times the mass. And yes, I know that the units are conventional US engineering units, not SI. That makes for easier scribbling on envelopes and napkins…
Br. Jamie, osb
Building superintendent/caretaker, 7200 sq. ft. historic house museum with dependencies in New England0 -
Solar is a potential option, however, the design of the structure was not set up for passive. Active solar has its own power challenges and more importantly, this building is being built in an area that sees minus 20 or more on many winter days. Solar will only be helpful during the shoulder seasons and there are complications in doing solar thermal without power.
The initial design we proposed involved Danfoss non- electric thermostats and zone valves, radiant floor heating in concrete, heated by a gasification wood boiler to use the abundant beetle kill pine, and two PV powered circulators backed up by battery that were mounted outside with the boiler. Super simple and effective.
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And I forgot to add, a large storage/buffer tank so they don't have to feed the beast at night.
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Well @Jamie Hall , you win the prize for being the first person I've asked that question of to give a coherent answer. Honorable mention to @jesmed1 . Normally a conversation goes something like this:
"My building has lots of thermal mass."
Me: "Oh really. How much?"
"It has 4" concrete floors"
Me: "How many units of thermal mass is that?"
"It has 4" concrete floors."
The property of matter you describe is more properly called "heat capacity."
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What about a few large masonry heaters per structure. Takes water control out of the equation. Manually fired. Long run times. Just need a mountain of wood. Aesthetically pleasing. Simple option.
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I tried to find out as much as I could about that building, I couldn't really find anything that wasn't written by the designer. They say it was engineered but they don't say anything about what they engineered. On their website they include temperature data for one month, April. They note that they have 32 banks of fans and they're set for 10 air changes per hour at night and two during the day.
The temperature data for April shows outdoor temperature ranging from about 14C to 28C (57F to 82F) and indoor temperatures ranging from 19C to 26C (66F to 79F). So basically the same kind of weather we get in April here in Washington and in many places. I wouldn't consider it an accomplishment to keep a building in that range, especially with that much ventilation.
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@DCContrarian I have no more information than you do, so I'm in no position to judge its success or failure.
I will say that if I were the clients building a $30M building in Africa with no air conditioning, I would insist on a significant thermal modeling effort to prove that my building was not going to become an uninhabitable greenhouse, and I expect the clients were smarter than I am.
Naturally the designer is going to tout his successes, real or imagined. He says the building saves between 35% and 50% on energy costs vs. similar buildings with full HVAC, so I guess it comes down to whether you believe him or not.
Either way, when you look at the cross-section and see the way natural convection is used for both ventilation and temperature regulation, obviously a lot of thought and planning went into it. Someone didn't just say, "let's put some giant thermal masses here and call it a day."
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It seems to me that it's more about the ventilation than the concrete. Ten air changes per hour is a lot. A small house might be 20,000 cubic feet, ten of those an hour is 3333 CFM. That's an enormous fan going all the time.
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tight houses require a complete air change every 3 - 5 hours in cold winds.
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