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How A Central Air Conditioning System Works
In the typical split system design, the furnace contains a fan that forces air through the system during both the winter and summer months. A variable speed fan in your furnace improves heating and
cooling efficiency, provides better comfort and indoor air quality
control - always get a furnace equipped with a variable speed fan! Once
indoor air is pulled to the HVAC system, the following happens
(assuming the above HVAC design):
1) The air is filtered. Above you can see an
air cleaner positioned between the return air ducts and the furnace.
This air cleaner has a high MERV rating (used to rate the effectiveness
of air cleaners), with the ability to filter microscopic elements out of
the air. These work much more effectively than normal furnace filters,
and some models can even capture and kill the common flu virus! (for
more information see: indoor air quality)
2) The air is cooled. The air is then pulled
into the furnace by a variable speed furnace fan, and forced through
the evaporator coil. An evaporator coil is a series of piping
containing chilled refrigerant from the air conditioner (at a low
pressure). The cold piping absorbs heat and causes moisture to
condense, thus cooling and dehumidifying the air. This conditioned air
is pushed on by the fan while the heated refrigerant is sent back
outside to the air conditioner (condensing unit). The refrigerant is
pressurized in the condensing unit which removes the heat. Then the
cycle repeats.
3) Mold is killed & coil efficiency kept high.
In the damp interior of an evaporator coil system, mold can grow which
can affect not only the health of your family (mold spores in the air),
but the health of your HVAC system by decreasing the efficiency of the
evaporator coil. In the HVAC design example above, a UV lamp is mounted
within the evaporator coil to prevent this. UV lamps are able to kill
and prevent mold from growing, thus keeping your home healthy and your
cooling efficiency high.
4) Cooled air sent back into the home. After
leaving the evaporator coil, the cool, dehumidified air is pushed back
into the home. In extremely humid climates, a separate dehumidifier can
be installed to remove more humidity from the air than is removed by
the evaporator coil.
5) Air is exchanged. At the top left of the
above HVAC design sits a ventilator. Ventilators are quite amazing.
They are part of complete indoor air quality solutions as they exchange
fresh outdoor air for stale indoor air. They are able to do this with
minimal loss of energy, and they retain the cooled and dehumidifed air
your HVAC system worked hard to produce!
How The Above Scenario Changes When Heating
A central air conditioning system is usually combined with a
heating system because they share some of the same devices, and of
course the same ductwork for distributing conditioned air:
1) The Air is filtered. As with air conditioning, the air is filtered before entering the furnace.
2) The air is heated. The gas (or oil fired)
furnace heats the air by igniting (from the pilot) flames and heating a
metal unit called the heat exchanger. This heat exchanger then heats
the air as it is forced through the sytem (via the same fan used to
bring air through the evaporator coil when cooling in the summer). Note:
as mentioned earlier, a variable speed fan in a furnace produces higher
efficiency for both heating and cooling. Is is able to move at
different speeds to efficiently keep air moving through your home even
then the furnace is not running. This improves home comfort and
humidity levels when indoor air quality products are in place like air
cleaners, humidifiers, UV lamps and ventilators.
3) The air is humidified. Since air is
normally dry in the winter, and heating will zap more moisture, a whole
home humidifier can be mounted after the furnace to properly humidify
the indoor air. This helps the air feel warmer which means you can keep
the temperature lower, resolves the health related irritations of dry
air, and protects paintings, woodwork and instruments in your home!
4) Air is exchanged. As in the summer, an
energy recovery ventilator can exchange outside air with stale indoor
air without losing the energy used to heat and humidify the home.
Heat Pump or Cooling Only System
When using a heat pump to heat and cool your home, or when you
live in a climate where only air conditioning is needed, an air handler
replaces your furnace and evaporator coil.
An air handler is also referred to as a fan coil (usually
based on installation design), but in a very basic sense, an air handler
is a combination of an evaporator coil and the variable speed fan from a
furnace. In a residential home it is normally installed in the same
space as a furnace/evaporator combo. How it works:
1) Cooling in the summer. For "air conditioning"
with a heat pump and fan coil, everything works the same as with a
normal A/C unit, evaporator coil and furnace configuration. The same
refrigerant, the same process, etc.
2) Heating in the winter. During the winter, the
heat pump reverses the cooling process. Though it may not feel like
it, even in cold weather air retains heat. And as long as the
refrigerant is colder than the outside air, heat can be extracted. A
heat pump absorbs this heat, heats the refrigerant and then sends the
heated refrigerant back inside to the fan coil where the coil then heats
the air. The balance point is a term used to describe the point where
the outside air temp and heat pump capability matches. Below this point
supplemental heat is required because the heat pump cannot pull enough
heat from the air outside.
Hybrid Systems
A hybrid system is designed to offer higher heating efficiency
during colder months. Heat pumps, unless geothermal, are all electric
and can be less expensive to run when the outside temperature is 40° and
above. A gas furnace is typically less expensive to heat with when
temperatures drop below 40° (this of course varies based on local gas
and utility prices).
1) Cooling with a hybrid system. There is no
difference to cooling when a hybrid system is in place. During warm
weather the heat pump performs just like an air conditioner by
pressurizing and cooling the refrigerant while the evaporator coil and
furnace operate like example one.
2) Cooling with a hybrid system. In the winter,
the heat pump and gas furnace switch on and off depending on determined
fuel prices and temperature. When the air is cold but not bitter cold,
the heat pump haply heats your home for less money. When temperatures
dive to freezing and below, the furnace takes over. And you pay less on
monthly winter utilties!
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