MartinLe
Civil/Environmental
- Oct 12, 2012
- 394
When designing biogas plants, One thing I want to know is the lowest temperature to size my heating for (so that at said temp. I get enough power into the substrate to compensate for losses through the tank walls). K Values etc. are all known.
To size my heating system I usually take the average from the coldest month and subtract another 10 - 15 °C (more in mountains and far inland, less if a plant is near a coast).
I don't care for short term cold-spike, I have tanks with 2-3000m³ mostly water, this is enough thermal mass that I don't worry about a cold night. But what common metric describes "the average over the coldest few days in a row in month x" that I can look up somewhere?
How have others solved this problem? Also, what climate databases do you use? I mostly used so far (monthly averages and precipitation).
To size my heating system I usually take the average from the coldest month and subtract another 10 - 15 °C (more in mountains and far inland, less if a plant is near a coast).
I don't care for short term cold-spike, I have tanks with 2-3000m³ mostly water, this is enough thermal mass that I don't worry about a cold night. But what common metric describes "the average over the coldest few days in a row in month x" that I can look up somewhere?
How have others solved this problem? Also, what climate databases do you use? I mostly used so far (monthly averages and precipitation).