3 Large Campus Loop Performance Improvement, Negative Pressure Issue (LB-17-C070)

Robert Henry, P.E., Texas A&M University
Hui Chen, P.E., Texas A&M University
Homer Bruner, Texas A&M University
Klayton Wittler, Texas A&M University
Elijah Crosby, Texas A&M University
James Riley, Texas A&M University
Texas A&M University’s Main campus has its heating and cooling district to provide needs of both heating hot water (HHW) and chilled water (CHW) to over 230 buildings. Commonly, buildings exceeding the plant static pressure level experience negative pressure in their tallest parts, allowing air into the system that reduces heat transfer efficiency, causes noise, and increases corrosion. The negative pressure also results in consuming much more pumping power due to the requirement of lifting water above plant static pressure to above top building coil. This paper identifies the reason for the negative pressure, and a pressure distribution analysis was performed on the campus thermal loop.

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