OP Prichmon
Please check my opinion:
I have published in NEOHIO 186ft per vertical borehole loaded ton of HEATING off compressor tons, no hot water features absorbing more energy, and
230 to 240 ft per loaded net-block continuous cooling tons. The numbers can be correlated.
the ratio is a simple 4/3 when looking at compressors doing heat production over cooling refrigeration uses. "rejected-heat" and "absorption" to GeoThermal-Loop designers.
FOR my work:
This was because we found at offices operating 22"tons" rejected heat / to your 23-24t the load you refer to, net cooling tons ((our rejecting 262,000 btuh in observation)).
22t is off the hot side of a loaded down a 20-ton compressor not even absorbing 18 net cooling tons at 42-40f fluid temps for fancoils...on the "chiller" side.
YOURS: That 20t compressor but put out 264,000 btuh and on a 1.1/2 hp circulator the loop hit 105+ GOING OUT to the ground heat-sink, and supplied the equipment with 96f fluid for cooling the 264,000 btuh of heat rejected by the electrical energy + the transferred heat recovered from the 17-18 net cooling tons, "cooling" the hot side of the compressor doing 'chilling'.
18-20% prop-glycol...
there (still) is the heat exchange with 12 boreholes, 15 ft apart x 245 ft deep , barely stuffed with 3/4" ID - COMMON PE3408 Poly pipe x dr-11 160 psig rated,
and over 60 ft from the building on 2" dr-11 PE headers, 2 ft apart in that 60ft run.
standing water in the drill holes was nearly 40ft from grade (a little deeper); standard grout
(see KAVANAUGH GROUT SOURCE HYBRIDS GEOTHERMAL ) although with plastic, still PROVED the 15ft spacing was not enough as well as overloading the under 200ft per ton of HEAT REJECTED to the ground-heat-sink. ENHANCED GROUT THERE IN THE OVERLOADING MAY HAVE BARELY BEEN 4 or 5% improved heat transfer, as the entire field was maxing out anyway.
I received calls and spoke with engineers in 3 states. Before I was told I said COOLING x 4/3 for total COMPRESSOR rejected heat- then re "THEY (trainers) TOLD ME 175 FT PER COOLING TON"
I said that is IF your LOAD is on the ground loop as a process cooler. AND if you want over 90f supplied to the load back from an Earth-Coupled Loop in wet clay-sand-gravel overburdened well boreholes... We had to account for actually seeing 240 vertical, wet ft in clays and sand and gravel barely work 12000 btuh input at mean loops of say 93f (+/- 4 or 5f)
IT IS IN FACT THAT YOUR 60F WOULD PROBABLY POINT TO ~ 260-TO -280 VERTICAL BOREHOLE FT OF 300FT DRILLING IF , IF IT WERE DAMP, AND IF YOU NEED CLOSER TO 90F OR 88F RETURNING TO YOUR LOADING.
How so?
We directly cooled only 8 tons at 81 out to the loop of about 3100 ft, and 77f back IN 52f wet soil. (same pump = 3.1/2f temp difference) OHIO clay and sand and gravel. We plotted the 1/3 work done at lower fluid temp results to the overheated ~ 9+ temp differential at 262,000 btuh rejected.
You could graph from info given. LOOK at my footage numbers, and even see if you must use COPPER at all.
In to the overloaded ECL (gle, Earth-Coupled-Loop) for over 3 weeks of "on" 24/7 high rejected 262,000 the ground loop, later "OFF"-line for 3 weeks was at 57f in recovery, here, in 52f soil.
HORIZONTAL boring of 12f to 14f will find you in 60f soil that that soil is probably over 66f to 67f in open sun in August-Sep and you could call folks in TX who had a (good or bad?) Ralph Cadwaller loop install , commercially, from the 90's, just for data... I think then called Loop-Tec.
It may be well thinking of using dry-coolers , less ground loop, and keeping the tower around for a while considering some Hybrid operation with common differential controllers for best "heat-sink" moments. And the dry-cooler and tower can get the ground loop down through the evenings to lower temperatures - if that is applicable, field fitting the above numbers is required.