So lets
start with the basics. A heat pump is an electrical driven device that extracts
heat from one place and transfers it to another. The heat pump is not a new invention...it
has been used around the world for many years. Examples of this tehnology are
air conditions and refrigerators.
Heat
pumps transfer heat by circulating a substance called a refrigerant through a
cycle of evaporation and condensation. A compressor pumps the refrigerant
between two heat exchanger coils. In one coil, the refrigerant is evaporated at
low pressure and absorbs heat from its surroundings. The refrigerant is then
compressed en route to the other coil, where it condenses at high pressure. At
this point, it releases the heat it absorbed earlier in the cycle.
Refrigerators
and air conditioners are both examples of heat pumps operating only in the cooling mode
The heat pump cycle is fully reversible,
and heat pumps can provide year-round climate control for your home – heating
in winter and cooling and dehumidifying in summer. Since
the ground and air outside always contain some heat, a heat pump can supply
heat to a house even on cold winter days. In fact, air at –18°C contains about
85 percent of the heat it contained at 21°C.
An
air-source heat pump absorbs heat from the outdoor air in winter and rejects
heat into outdoor air in summer. It is the most common type of heat pump found
in Canadian homes at this time. However, ground-source (also called
earth-energy, geothermal, geoexchange) heat pumps, which draw heat from the
ground or ground water, are becoming more widely used.
Mike
Mike
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