Low Temperature Energy Recovery Designs

Authors

  • John Archibald American Solar, Inc.

Abstract

This article discusses low temperature energy recovery systems
that are being installed on three Federal buildings in the Washington,
DC, area. The three projects discussed use simple systems that deliver
low cost heat to buildings in innovative ways. Each uses a source of low
temperature heating available from within the building to reduce fossil
fuel use. One system recovers heat from the ventilation return air to heat
water for the hydronic reheat loop serving variable air volume boxes in
the building. The second system recovers heat from an attic space below
a plywood roof deck covered with asphalt shingles to heat a domestic
hot water loop for a barracks. The third system recovers heat from the
solar re-roofing of a building to supply heated air for swimming pool
heating and for a heating, ventilating, and air conditioning system. The
purpose of this article is to demonstrate the versatility of these low tem-
perature heat recovery systems.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biography

John Archibald, American Solar, Inc.

John Archibald is the President of American Solar, Inc., an An-
nandale, Virginia, company that uses conventional walls and roofs to
heat air using solar energy. He has designed and installed many of the
largest solar air heating roofs in North America and designed heat re-
covery systems using low cost air heating. Email: info@americansolar.
com.

References

U.S. Department of Defense, Environmental Security Technology Certification

Program (ESTCP) project EW 201148.

U.S. Department of Defense, Environmental Security Technology Certification

Program (ESTCP) project EW 201512.

Downloads

Published

2017-09-08

How to Cite

Archibald, J. . (2017). Low Temperature Energy Recovery Designs. Strategic Planning for Energy and the Environment, 37(2), 69–79. Retrieved from https://journals.riverpublishers.com/index.php/SPEE/article/view/19553

Issue

Section

Articles