to install and more complicated to operate, a chiller
plant offers a number of benefits over simple packaged cooling
units, including greater energy efficiency, better controllability,
and longer life.
Chilled water-based cooling systems are frequently used to
aircondition large office buildings or campuses that encompass
multiple buildings. They represent a large investment from the
perspective of first cost, physical space they require within the
building, as well as energy and maintenance cost. Yet despite these
fiscal and spatial impacts, many chiller plants do not reach their
potential from the standpoint of energy efficiency. In the past,
California's Title 24 Energy Efficiency Standards for Non-
Residential Buildings did not have particularly aggressive
efficiency standards for chillers, but this has changed with the
2001 revision of the code. In some cases, the 2001 Standards have
increased efficiency requirements by as much as 25 percent. Chiller
plants that easily complied with older Title 24 Standards might not
be efficient enough to meet the 2001 Standards.
The strategies discussed in this design brief can provide the
basis for designing chilled water cooling systems that can beat the
more aggressive 2001 Title 24 Energy Efficiency Standards by 30
percent or more.
The first edition of this design brief was
prepared for Energy Design Resources in 2003. Between January and
April of 2010, an engineering review of this document was conducted
to update passages affected by recent changes in the California
Building Energy Efficiency Standards (Title 24 2008). The original
content creator was not actively involved in this engineering
review, and therefore is not responsible for the updates to the
affected passages.
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