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HICSS
2009
IEEE

Efficiency, Economic and Environmental Assessment of Ground Source Heat Pumps in Central Pennsylvania

14 years 6 months ago
Efficiency, Economic and Environmental Assessment of Ground Source Heat Pumps in Central Pennsylvania
— The energy use of a ground-source heat pump (GSP) for heating, cooling and hot water in a Central Pennsylvania residence (namely, the author’s house) is analyzed, compared to a simulation of electricity and a heating-oil furnace (with electric cooling) for these same energy uses. Energy demands for space conditioning in the house are simulated by building a model of the house using the Transient Energy System Simulation (TNRSYS) tool. Overall, the efficiency gain for the ground-source heat pump compared to electricity is 43% for cooling and 81% for heating. For home heating and hot water, the ground-source heat pump has a 42% efficiency gain over a fuel-oil furnace. The system modeled in this paper has a payback period of between four and five years compared to an all-electric system. The payback period compared to a hybrid system of fuel-oil heat and electric cooling is between two and three years.
Seth Blumsack, Jeffrey Brownson, Lucas Witmer
Added 19 May 2010
Updated 19 May 2010
Type Conference
Year 2009
Where HICSS
Authors Seth Blumsack, Jeffrey Brownson, Lucas Witmer
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