Geothermal Heating, Cooling, and Dehumidification Ventilation System
20170248332 · 2017-08-31
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02B30/56
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F24F2003/1435
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F12/006
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02B30/54
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y02B10/40
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F24F3/147
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E10/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F24F5/005
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F24F5/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F3/147
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A system designed to introduce fresh air ventilation into the living space, eliminate contaminants, and add fresh air to augment a building's HVAC system. This is done in order to save energy, and the costs associated with heat loss or gain in a building. The system employs the use of geothermal energy conferred to air via a cavity which is constructed in the basement, on the slab, foundation, in the crawl space and/or attic of a building. This cavity is created to circulate, absorb and store/release the geo-solar characteristics of a building, taking advantage the consistent subterranean temperature of the earth and/or sun, in order to warm air from outside during the winter minimizing the foundation heat sink, and cool air during the summer. One or more heat exchangers are used to transfer the energy from contaminated air in the cavity to clean air destined for the HVAC system.
Claims
1. A method for regulating comfort of a building through geothermal energy conservation comprising: an air system intaking fresh hot/humid air via an intake; the air system routing the fresh hot/humid air to a heat exchanger; the heat exchanger cooling the fresh hot/humid air, converting the fresh hot/humid air to cool fresh/humid air; routing the cool fresh/humid air underground into a geo-loop exchange; routing the cool fresh/humid air into a top portion of an evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier; the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier converting the cool fresh/humid air to cooler dryer air; the air system routing the cooler dryer air to the building; the air system collecting cool stale/dry air from the building; the air system routing the cool stale/dry air to the heat exchanger; the heat exchanger converting the cool stale/dry air to hot stale/dry air; the air system routing the hot stale/dry air to a bottom portion of the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier; the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier humidifying the hot stale/dry air to humid air causing chilling of a substrate evaporative pad surface that wicks moisture from the condensing cool fresh/humid air passing through the top portion in the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier; and the air system routing the humid warmer air out of the air system via an exhaust.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising: water condensing within the top portion of the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier; condensed water collecting on a mesh; the water dropping down to the bottom portion of the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier through the water-permeable substrate evaporative pad surface; and the water evaporating by the hot stale/dry air.
3. An evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier system for use with structural air systems equipped with a geothermal mass component comprising: routing cool fresh/humid air underground into a geo-loop exchange to create cooler fresh/humid air; routing the cooler fresh/humid air into a top portion of an evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier; wherein the top portion of the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier is equipped with a condensating surface and a substrate; wherein the substrate is water-permeable; water condensing on the condensating surface within the top portion of the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier; water of the substrate transferring to a bottom portion of the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier; the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier converting the cooler fresh/humid air to cooler dryer air by transferring the water of the substrate to the bottom portion of the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier; water that has been transferred to the bottom portion through the substrate to hot stale/dry air; and the air system routing the cooler dryer air to the building.
4. The system of claim 3, wherein the condensating surface has a large surface area.
5. The system of claim 3, further comprising: the substrate wicking water from the condensating surface.
6. The system of claim 3, wherein the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier is underground.
7. The system of claim 1, wherein the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier is underground.
8. The system of claim 3, wherein the condensating surface is composed of at least one of the following: natural sponge, agricultural capillary matts, clay, plastic, and graphite.
9. The system of claim 3, wherein said ‘the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier converting the cooler fresh/humid air to cooler dryer air by transferring the water of the substrate to the bottom portion of the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier’ is achieved via gravity-assisted wicking of water through the substrate down to the evaporative pad.
10. The system of claim 1, wherein the geo-loop is composed of subterranean tubing.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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[0021]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0022] The present invention is a system for augmenting the conventional HVAC system of a building via the use of the known geothermal properties of the earth. The goal of the present invention is to provide a means of eradicating contaminants within a basement, such as mold, mildew, allergens, and radon gas, and thereby enhancing the quality of living for the inhabitants of the building, maintaining additional, usable living space within the building, free from said associated contaminants frequently found to exist in conventional basements. Similarly, by augmenting the conventional HVAC system of a building, money is ultimately saved by the end user. The present invention seeks to regulate the temperature of an entire building by employing the relatively constant temperature found within the concrete foundation, concrete basement, crawl space, slab, and/or attic of the building. The present invention solves the problem of basement contamination and dampness effectively by applying a ventilation system to the internal structure of the basement, keeping the basement dry. Through this process, the temperature of the walls, original concrete basement flooring, crawl space, slab, attic and/or any other stale air room is conveyed to fresh air which is to be circulated throughout the building.
[0023] The system of the present invention may be outlined, as seen in
[0024] The fresh air then arrives at a dwelling air to air heat exchanger (50), where it is further conditioned by stale air being returned from the kitchen and bathrooms of the building’ and or any other stale air room (40). Humidity of the air is preferably stabilized or removed at the dwelling air to air heat exchanger (50), but it is envisioned that the present invention could be configured to remove humidity at either the dwelling air to air heat exchanger (50 and/or the first geo air to air heat exchanger (20). In alternate embodiments of the present invention, the humidity setting of the system may be changed manually in order to conform to the necessity of the current season.
[0025] Next, the fresh air is then conditioned to the approximate temperature of the interior of the building via the dwelling air to air heat exchanger (50). The temperature of the stale air is conveyed to the fresh air without risk of contact or contamination. The fresh air then enters a second duct (60). The second duct (60) is preferably identical in size to the first duct (30). The fresh air is transferred to an air handler (100), where the flow of the fresh air is handled. The air handler (100) is conventionally designed. Within the air handler (100), air from the building's HVAC system joins the fresh air (if necessary) according to the thermostat setting on the HVAC system. The air from the HVAC system is controlled via a conventional damper (90). The damper (90) controls the flow of air from the HVAC system according to the settings provided by the thermostat of the system via conventional means. The fresh air, now at the desired temperature, then passes to a series of supply ducts (110), which route the fresh air to all of the rooms of the building.
[0026] The series of supply ducts (110) are designed to supply fresh air to each room of the building, and room temperature stale air is continuously extracted from the kitchen, bathroom, and any other stale air area of the building. It is envisioned that the existing HVAC ducts may be employed to route the fresh air to the rooms.
[0027] After circulating within the building, the fresh air becomes stale air. Given that the air is now stale, it is advantageous to remove the potentially contaminated and stale air from the building. The dirtiest rooms of a building are known to be the bathrooms and kitchen. Therefore, the stale air is carried, via a vacuum, into a series of return air ducts (40) from the kitchen and bathrooms of the building. The stale air return ducts (40) are preferably the same size in diameter as the supply ducts (100), and are conventional pipes or ventilation ducts commonly found in a building. However, these ducts may need to be installed into the building or simply rerouted to be employed by the system of the present invention. The stale air is routed to the basement, where it is pumped into a geothermal air cavity established against the concrete walls and concrete floor of the basement. The geo-cavity (120) may be seen along the walls and along the floor in
[0028] The geothermal cavity (120) exists beneath a foam layer (170) which is placed against the original concrete basement floor (160), as well as against the original concrete basement wall (205), as seen in
[0029] The system of the present invention involves the construction of a geo-cavity (120) which is established along the original concrete basement floor (160) and the interior basement concrete walls (205) of a building. The system of the present invention creates the geo-cavity (120) via the erection of a series of foam panels (200) which are interlocked together and sealed to be air-tight. It should be understood that the foam panels (200) may be interlocked together by any conventional means. The foam panels (200) are designed to line the entirety of the original concrete basement floor (160), as well as the original concrete walls (205) of the basement.
[0030] The foam panels (200) are configured to have two differing sides: a first side which has a series of ridges or points (shown as ‘feet’ (15) in
[0031] Stale air gathered from the kitchen and bathrooms and/or any other stale air area of the building is pumped, via the dwelling air to air heat exchanger (50) through duct (70), into the geo-cavity (120), where it is distributed evenly across the original basement concrete floor (160). This causes the geo-cavity (120) to become pressurized, given that the foam panels (200) are preferably sealed to be air tight. After being pumped into the geo-cavity (120) beneath the foam panels (200) placed above the original basement concrete floor (160), the stale air exits the cavity via a series of small tubes which are placed along the perimeter of the basement, along the concrete basement walls (205). Alternatively, a labyrinth could be constructed to force air underneath the floor and then exit a duct similar in size to the original duct of air entry under the floor (110). These tubes focus the stale air into an extended geo-cavity (120) that exists along the concrete basement floor (160) and walls (205) of the basement. The pressure within the system, driven by fans housed within the dwelling air to air heat exchanger (50), forces the air up to the top of the concrete basement walls (205) along the foam panels (200) where the air escapes through a series of small stale-air escape holes (140), and into a manifold (145) which preferably lines the entirety of the top of the layered wall (200). From the manifold (145), air is routed to all rooms of the building via a series of supply ducts (110) after passing through several ducts, exchangers, and an air handler.
[0032] As shown in the example,
[0033] Consequently, the present invention relates to a basement integrated geothermal heating and cooling system which employs a system of ducts, as well as an insulation cavity (120) created between the interior concrete foundation walls of a basement, and an artificially placed set of thin walls (200) and flooring (170) integrated into the basement housing. Stale air is directed from bathrooms and kitchen (40) of the building into this geo-cavity (120) through a dwelling air to air heat exchanger (50) and duct (70), and is then heated or cooled, depending on the season, by the geothermal properties of the earth, whereby the energy is then transferred by one or more conventional air to air heat exchangers to the fresh air en route to the HVAC system of the building.
[0034] The present invention is a system designed to be integrated into a home or other building. Said home or other building may or may not be gutted to the framing. However, it is advised to be properly insulated and air sealed to create a “Continuous Whole Building Ventilation”, for healthy indoor air quality, as stale air within the cavity is not permitted to come into contact with fresh air within the home, or pumped in from outdoors.
[0035] The present invention manages to harness the geo-thermal energy of the earth, as well as the natural cooling effect provided by the evaporation of moisture in the cooling season, i.e. the warm months of the year. The flow of air through this system can be seen in its preferred embodiment in
[0036] Due to the air space (120) between the floor and walls and insulation qualities of the panels (200 and 170), the basement structure of the present invention is no longer a heat sink—and has become a thermal battery/storage unit assisting the overall seasonal performance of the building's heating and cooling system. The basement structure and adjacent earth, during the beginning of summer, will be cooler than normal due to the winter's heat extraction cycle, and it will be warmer than normal at the beginning of winter, due to the dumping of heat during the summer. This results in a thermal energy lag effect in the foundation and soil, which assists the home's heating and cooling when equipped with the present invention. A basement equipped with the system of the present invention is therefore designed to function similar to that of a battery, storing energy in the form of heat and applying it to ‘flywheel’ the building thermally into the next season.
[0037] Another goal of the present invention is to make a heating and cooling system a geothermal exchange ventilation system for geo-thermal federal tax credits by illustrating a new and efficient system of energy for our homes.
[0038] The present invention is designed to be installed with minimal effort by individuals with limited experience and expertise in the realm of building ventilation. Ideally, the foam panels (200 and 170) of the present invention may be sold at traditional hardware stores for individuals to construct the system of the present invention within their own home. The foam panels (200 and 170) employed by the system of the present invention are designed to simply be placed over the bare, existing, original concrete basement floor (160) and walls (205). The foam panels (200 and 170) are easily interlocked together without special skills. The foam panels naturally seal together to form an air-tight seal; however, this seal may be augmented by the use of caulks or tapes. The air-tight seal established by the foam panels (200 and 170) is crucial to the function of the present invention, as a vacuum is created within the geo-cavity (120) by the pressure supplied by the first geo air to air heat exchanger (20) and the dwelling air to air heat exchanger (50). In total, the present invention is preferably designed to function on relatively low power. Some instantiations of the present invention may be powered by as little as 40/80 watts.
[0039] The present invention solves the issue of poor indoor air quality, as the air of the building is continually being changed out for fresh air from outdoors. Additionally, the present invention solves the problem of basement contamination caused by radon gas, mold, mildew and allergens by constantly circulating reclaimed air from the building along the bare concrete walls (205) and the original concrete floor (160) of the basement, where mold and mildew are commonly known to exist. The air helps to foster the evaporation of any liquid found in a damp basement. This evaporation cools the air as well, helping to augment the HVAC system during the warm months of the year.
[0040] In other words, with reference to
[0041] The most stale room temperature air in the building is located primarily in the kitchen and bathrooms, which is extracted out, along with other stale air, through a series of stale air return ducts (40). The stale air then travels through the dwelling air to air heat exchanger (50), then through duct (70), supplying the Geo cavity (120), where the stale air becomes the approximate temperature of the subterranean concrete basement floor (160) and walls (205). The stale air then enters the first geo air to air heat exchanger (20), then through duct (130) as it leaves the building.
[0042] With reference to
[0043] The summer open loop process of the system of the present invention is outlined in
[0044] Alternate embodiments of the present invention may be configured to function equally within other environments pertaining to a building, such as slabs, attics and crawl spaces. Similarly, the system of the present invention may be configured to function within a conventional earth tube placed within the ground. Preferably, in all alternate embodiments of the present invention, foam panels (200) are employed in order to maintain a layer of air which may flow over the interior wall and floors of a structure, in order to capture the energy properties held within the structure. Due to the continual air flow within a basement equipped with the system and foam layers (200) of the present invention, radiating energy loss is minimized. In all forms of the present invention, the layer of foam in addition to the current of air moving beneath the foam within the geo-cavity (120) also helps to provide insulation for the energy of the system, maximizing the effect of the present invention, as well as the duration of its function.
[0045] Alternate embodiments of the present invention may employ alternate forms of the foam panels (200) designed to line the preferably subterranean original walls and flooring of a building. These alternate forms of the foam panels (200) would preferably be configured with feet (15) arranged in a pattern such that the air is channeled in a precise manner that would maximize the area of contact between the stale air and the concrete of the floor and walls. Such a channel would preferably be arranged such that the air would be forced to travel in a serpentine pattern, amounting to a labyrinth in which the air must travel in order to reach the escape tubes upon exit, prior to being pumped into the earth tube or attic geo-heat exchanger (20). In this embodiment, stale air is preferably guided through a series of alternating channels, similar to that of a serpentine pattern.
[0046] Additionally, the present invention may be employed in assisting to ‘net zero’ out a building combined with building envelope conservation measures. A building may be ‘net zeroed’ on an annual energy use. In all instances of the present invention, the system of the present invention is designed to contribute a geo form of ‘passive house energy,’ known in the industry to be a supremely energy efficient and nearly self-sustaining system.
[0047] An additional alternate embodiment of the present invention may employ additional capacitors in order to ‘store’ the geothermal temperatures generated or held within the earth for longer periods of time than provided by merely employing the basement/foundation of a building. In this manner, the ‘battery’ that is the concrete foundation and basement of a building may be expanded. Methods of expanding the functional subterranean elements within the ground may include, but are not limited to, installing a drum or well beneath the foundation of the house capable of holding water, sand, or other thermally sensitive element. Additionally, solar panels may be employed in the winter months in order to augment the geothermal generation of heat within the drum.
[0048] For example, a container of water or sand could be placed within an air plenum within the thermal envelope of a home. This plenum and its contents would stabilize in temperature. This storage could be increased via power provided from a solar panel placed above the surface during the winter months. The energy stored within the contents of the container could augment the system of the present invention via the routing of coolant to the container. The container in a passive air chamber crawl space or any cavity may be used as a return air plenum in passive air distribution establishments of the present invention.
[0049] An alternate primary embodiment of the present invention is depicted in
[0050] As with other embodiments of the present invention, the alternative primary embodiment shown in
[0051] This alternate primary embodiment of the present invention utilizes and incorporates cargo shipping containers as subterranean modules to function as the building foundation of low energy, air-tight houses that incorporate air-to-air heat exchangers. By utilizing the building's foundation as thermal storage and geo-exchange, thermal mass is integrated as part of the heat exchanger into concrete of the foundation or basement during construction. Inexpensive plastic tubing is integrated into formwork, which is suspended from the sides of the cargo container. The module is situated in the ground, and is encased in concrete. A heat-recovery ventilation (HRV or ERV) is utilized with high-performance fans to reduce the energy required to supply the outdoor air needed to ensure indoor air quality. The tubing of the module is encased by a permeable concrete foundation heat exchanger, which can be used to precondition ventilation air. Additionally, the system's large permeable concrete foundation can optionally house an integrated evaporative cooling system for pre-cooling of the thermal mass to be generated at night, or when evaporative cooling climate atmosphere opportunities permit.
[0052] In short, the alternate primary embodiment depicted in
[0053] In other embodiments, a mesh (360) as shown in
[0054] It is envisioned that this embodiment of the present invention may be especially useful for integration into dehumidifying and conditioning of farm ‘green’ houses. This includes, but is not limited to structures constructed wholly or in part of cargo shipping containers, of which one is employed as a subterranean module foundation, and a second container may be disposed above the subterranean container. In such installations, construction is facilitated, as the geo-loop exchange (460) and thermal storage can be more easily installed, and pathways within the floor of the subterranean portion may be converted to a geo-cavity (120).
[0055] It should additionally be noted that the system disclosed in
[0056] Alternate forms of the substrate (330), including the mesh (360) and/or cones (320), found within the top portion (390) of the evaporator-condensator-dehumidifier (340) of the present invention may employ one or more of the following water-permeable substances: natural sponge, agricultural capillary matts, micro-straws constructed as a butcher block matt, of clay, plastic, or graphite. It should be understood that the mesh (360) and/or cones (320), or other substance is configured to act as a condensating surface on which water may condense.
[0057] The efficacy of some embodiments of the present invention may be augmented via the use of a rainwater-injector, which is configured to inject or irrigate collected rainwater into a subterranean structural-mass storage evaporative cooler, thereby cooling the thermal-mass to allow the geo-loop exchange (460) to function more efficiently.
[0058] Finally, it should be understood that the present invention is not solely limited to the invention as described in the embodiments above, but further comprises any and all embodiments within the scope of this application and/or the following claims.