Understanding Water-Chiller Efficiency Ratings

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By Roy S. Hubbard, Jr.
Manager, Market Development
YORK© chiller products
Johnson Controls, Inc.

A clear understanding of two measures of chiller efficiency—the design-efficiency rating and the Non-standard Part Load Value (NPLV) rating—can help organizations obtain the best capital cost and energy efficiency when acquiring new chillers. It also may help facility managers understand why they may not be getting the level of energy efficiency they expect from existing chillers.

A service technician checks readings on a chiller control panel

Clearing Up Some Common Misconceptions

Many system designers mistakenly reason that “more is better” and use both the design-efficiency rating and the NPLV rating in the specifications they provide to facility managers and building owners. However, this approach is based on several misconceptions.

The first misconception is that the NPLV rating only measures chiller performance at off-design conditions. In fact, the NPLV rating already includes both design efficiency and off-design efficiency.

Off-design performance is of paramount importance, because empirical observations have shown that chillers operate most of their operating hours at partial loads and/or at off-design temperatures. To verify and quantify these observations, the Air-conditioning and Refrigeration Institute (ARI) studied 25 years of weather data collected in 29 cities that represent 80 percent of U.S. chiller purchases during that same time period.

Table 1 shows what the ARI found. Specifically, 99% of chiller operating hours are spent at off-design conditions.

A second misconception is that a chiller with good efficiency at design conditions will automatically have a good NPLV rating. In fact, chillers can have the same design efficiency but have NPLV ratings that vary widely, depending on capital cost. That’s because chillers can have different off-design efficiencies.

Comparing NPLV and Design Efficiency in Two Different Chillers

Consider an example of what happens when both the design-efficiency and NPLV ratings are applied by comparing two 1,000 TR chillers (see Table 2).

Option A Chiller, which costs less than the Specified Chiller, has the same NPLV rating, but a higher design efficiency. Because both chillers have equal NPLV ratings, they will have equal annual energy consumption.

If the specification contained only the NPLV rating, Option A Chiller might be an attractive choice. However, if the specification requires that a chiller meet both the NPLV rating and the design-efficiency rating, Option A Chiller can’t meet both ratings and, therefore, can’t be bid. The manufacturer of Option A Chiller will usually need to modify it by adding more heat-exchanger surface to meet the design-efficiency rating. The performance of this new chiller is shown in Table 3 as Option B Chiller.

The additional heat-exchanger surface improves the NPLV rating of Option B Chiller, resulting in Annual Energy that is four percent better than the Specified Chiller. But, it has also become more expensive, costing $31,000 more than Option A Chiller. This demonstrates how specifying a chiller’s design efficiency in addition to its NPLV may complicate matters. Instead of equalizing energy consumption as a basis for comparing costs, now both annual energy consumption and pricing are unequal.

Building owners may also face higher capital costs. Suppose the Specified Chiller and Option B Chiller are bid by two different manufacturers. What is the impact of the specification on bid day? The manufacturer of the Specified Chiller has no incentive to lower its price below $270,000, so that’s where the chiller price settles out.

Unfortunately, the owner in this example is likely to end up purchasing the Specified Chiller, but will pay about $20,000 more and get no additional energy savings, simply because Option A Chiller did not satisfy the design-efficiency specification and could not be bid.

Addressing Electrical Demand, Wiring Size, Codes and Rebates

Although including the design-efficiency rating may diminish owner value, there is still a tendency to use it. Some designers believe that the design-efficiency rating will impact electric-demand charges. Others are concerned that it may affect power-wiring size.

Does a chiller’s design-efficiency rating impact electric-demand charges?

Consider the aforementioned Option A Chiller, which has a design efficiency of 0.576 kW/TR. At first glance, that chiller would appear to cause higher electric-demand charges than the Specified Chiller, which has a design efficiency of 0.562 kW/TR. But is that really the case?

Chiller peak kW usually has little impact on building demand because of heat-load timing. The building’s kW and the chiller’s kW typically peak at different times of the day. This phenomenon is illustrated in Figure 1.

Figure 1: This curve shows building demand vs. chiller demand and the typical time-of-day offset between the two

Most air-conditioned buildings reach their peak electric demand between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. when occupancy is usually at its highest. Higher occupancy also translates into more heat generated by lights, elevators, cafeterias, office equipment, etc.

Surprisingly, most chillers reach peak electric demand between 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. Why so late? At about 12 p.m., the sun’s rays strike the ground at the most direct angle. Through convection, the ground then heats the ambient air to its highest dry-bulb temperature at about 2 p.m. Once the air temperature is at its maximum, the heat is slowly conducted through the building skin, a process that peaks building heat load around 4 p.m. In parallel, the wet-bulb temperature of the ambient air also reaches its maximum later in the day.

The higher wet-bulb temperature raises the entering-condenser-water temperature, which raises the head pressure against which chillers must work, hurting energy efficiency. When these factors combine, the chiller sees its peak load, peak head, and, therefore, peak kW in late afternoon.

Service technician and building supervisor discuss efficiency of steam-turbine driven centrifugal chiller

If the chiller is being used to cool a process, then its power profile will typically be flatter than shown in Figure 1, and its demand will have an impact on total demand. During the one or two peak-cooling months, Option A Chiller may have a slightly higher demand charge. However, the fact that both chillers have the same NPLV rating means that Option A Chiller must have better off-design efficiency. So during the many months of off-design operation, Option A Chiller will likely have lower demand charges. Hence, annual demand charges may actually be less. If a chiller is cooling a process, and demand is ratcheted year-round, then chiller kW could impact building demand. However, the number of applications in this situation is relatively small.

When energy codes or utility rebates require inclusion of the design-efficiency rating in the specification, it is better for the designer to specify the maximum kW or kW/TR required by the code or rebate. That’s because a lower value could result in higher capital costs with no reduction in annual energy costs. This disparity is leading more code-writing agencies to recognize the NPLV rating.

For all these reasons, small differences in the design efficiencies between chillers usually have little impact on the demand charges incurred by the building.

Do small differences in design efficiency affect the size of the power wiring?

The correlation between design efficiency and wiring size is usually a non-issue, because a given wire size can handle a range of amps. Thus, a chiller with a higher design kW/TR will not necessarily require larger wire. In fact, about 90% of the time, it will not, because the wiring size can already handle slightly higher amperage.

In any case, a better way to ensure proper wiring size is to specify maximum full-load amps and minimum power factor at the chiller starter.

Words of Advice

Chiller-efficiency specifications that specify both the NPLV rating and the design-efficiency rating may hinder the designer’s ability to meet the owner’s goals, if the objective of the specification is attaining the lowest capital cost for similar annual energy. That’s because the two ratings can create inequalities in annual energy-consumption comparisons, which also result in higher capital costs passed on to the owner. Also, the design-efficiency rating usually has little practical impact on electrical-demand charges and wiring size.

Instead of using both ratings, the best chiller-efficiency specification uses the NPLV rating by itself. For power-wire sizing, specifying the maximum full-load amps and the minimum power factor eliminates all ambiguity about actual size requirements. If energy codes or utility rebates require that the specification include the design-efficiency rating, the maximum allowable kW or kW/TR should be specified.

Refrigerant leak testing remains an important step in the maintenance and service of high-pressure chillers; low refrigerant charge can degrade chiller efficiency significantly.

Vibration analysis is used to determine if and when motor-compressor alignment needs to be addressed. Misalignment can cause premature parts wear and affected overall efficiency.

Headquartered in Washington, D.C., the U.S. Green Building Council http://www.usgbc.org is the nation’s leading coalition for the advancement of buildings that are environmentally responsible, profitable, and healthy places to live and work. Established in 1993, the Council offers various products and services to include the LEED Green Building Rating System, an annual International Green Building Conference and Exposition, membership summits, information exchange, education, and policy advocacy.

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