Abstract

An all-variable-speed chiller plant has been advocated so that the chillers and their associated pumps can work at reduced speed during part-load conditions for energy saving purposes. In this new building project, the savings merit is certainly attractive. However, an existing chiller plant or retrofit project, which is constrained by the performance of installed equipment and the configuration of a hydronic circuit, may not benefit from the an ideal extent of savings. As such, an existing chiller plant serving a typical commercial building was used to evaluate this. Through year-round dynamic simulation, it is found that there were about 5%, 6%, and 8% energy savings of the whole chiller plant when applying variable flow control on secondary chilled water pumps only, both primary and secondary chilled water pumps, and all chilled and condenser water pumps, respectively. If constant-speed centrifugal chillers were substituted by the variable-speed ones, an additional 4% savings could be achieved, which was, however, less than that incurred from the associated pumps. The payback periods of different variable flow control strategies were well below 1 year, indicating the techno-economical feasibility for wider application in existing chiller plants in subtropical climates.

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