So to close the loop of this, the part I was missing - and the part that almost all of the glycol literature misses - was the heat transfer. Being able to contain heat (specific heat) is one thing. Being able to transfer it is something else (thermal conductivity). Selecting a coil knowing about the glycol is fine, but attempting to put glycol in coils that were selected for straight water may lead to serious trouble. I typed up the following to send to some others around my office as a reminder. Do you think I accurately explained things?
Just a reminder about adding glycol to existing systems that don’t have it now. There are 3 main detriments to adding glycol to a system:
1. Glycol has less heat capacity than water.
2. Glycol is more difficult to pump than water.
3. Glycol has less thermal conductivity than water.
Most of the glycol literature does a good job of explaining the first 2 detriments; however, the literature almost always neglects to mention the third. Having less heat capacity means that it takes more glycol to deliver the same amount of heat as straight water. So it takes more of a heavier fluid to convey the same heat energy as water. It takes more pump head to move the glycol around, and you get less heat out of it. The glycol literature does a good job of reporting this and lists “multipliers” or “correction factors” to account for the difference. Most of the literature boils it down to saying that a certain percent increase in flow will make all of the problems go away. They also point out that a pump change may be required due to the increased head, but otherwise, they lead you to believe that more GPM is the answer. THIS IS ONLY PART OF THE STORY!
It must be understood that this only accounts for the heat capacity of the glycol and NOT its ability to TRANSFER that heat. Glycol also has less thermal conductivity, so it will not give up the heat as easily as water. Almost all of the literature neglects this part, which can come back to bite you. If you are installing a new system with glycol, all of the equipment, heat exchangers, coils, etc. will be selected with glycol, so there should be no issues. If, on the other hand, you are putting glycol in an existing water system and re-using coils, you may now have grossly undersized heat transfer devices.
The magnitude of the problem changes with fluid temperature, and it is much more prominent for cooling applications. For heating with a glycol temperature of 180 degrees, the heat transfer from a coil will be on the order of 10% less than it otherwise would be with straight water. You may be able to get away without changing the coil. A 40 degree cooling coil with glycol, on the other hand, may only deliver on the order of 50% of the heat transfer that it did with straight water.
So bottom line, if you are adding glycol to a chilled water system, be extremely careful that your equipment and coils are going to function correctly. Simply increasing the GPM won’t cut it!