gcomyn
Marine/Ocean
- Sep 28, 2006
- 25
I have trouble bending my mind around what I suspect is a very simple problem.
We have a space that is being heated with a hot water circuit. It has already been calculated that to keep it at 10C when the outside temperature is -10C, there is a loss of 100kW to the outside air.
So, I realize that Q=mcdT. Hot water heaters seem to commonly deliver at 85C. I can assume that across all the various radiators in the space that the temperature at the end is 41C. (Maybe 44C is too much of a dT.) c for water seems to be about 2 kJ/kg-K.
Solve for m: 1kg/s or 3600 L/hr.
I look at a chart of recovery times for water heaters:
I realize these are more for houses than for large spaces, but even if I were to use 4 in series, I'm still looking for a recovery rate of 3600/4=900 L/hr at about 50kW. 50*4=200kW which seems like a lot when I only need to heat the space 100 kW worth.
Am I missing something?
We have a space that is being heated with a hot water circuit. It has already been calculated that to keep it at 10C when the outside temperature is -10C, there is a loss of 100kW to the outside air.
So, I realize that Q=mcdT. Hot water heaters seem to commonly deliver at 85C. I can assume that across all the various radiators in the space that the temperature at the end is 41C. (Maybe 44C is too much of a dT.) c for water seems to be about 2 kJ/kg-K.
Solve for m: 1kg/s or 3600 L/hr.
I look at a chart of recovery times for water heaters:
I realize these are more for houses than for large spaces, but even if I were to use 4 in series, I'm still looking for a recovery rate of 3600/4=900 L/hr at about 50kW. 50*4=200kW which seems like a lot when I only need to heat the space 100 kW worth.
Am I missing something?