Martínez Echeverri, Álvaro
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Martínez Echeverri
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Álvaro
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Ingeniería
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ISC. Institute of Smart Cities
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Publication Open Access Optimal combination of an air-to-air thermoelectric heat pump with a heat recovery system to HVAC a passive house dwelling(Elsevier, 2022) Díaz de Garayo, Sergio; Martínez Echeverri, Álvaro; Astrain Ulibarrena, David; Ingeniería; Ingeniaritza; Institute of Smart Cities - ISCThe main objective of this research is to propose a HVAC system for an 80–100 m2 passive house dwelling based on a thermoelectric air-to-air heat pump combined with a heat recovery unit. The computational parametric investigation demonstrates that the integration of the heat recovery unit significantly improves the coefficient of performance of the heat pump: 2–3 times for partial load operation and 12.5 % for maximum load. Moreover, the number of required modules to reach the maximum performance is at least 5 times lower. A second analysis assesses its seasonal heating performance in three climates as stated by the energy labeling Directive 2010/30/EU. The optimum number of thermoelectric modules in all cases is close to 15, regardless of the climate. This 15-modules thermoelectric heat pump provides a maximum heating capacity of 2500 W and 405 W for cooling, which compensates the typical internal heat gains and the transmission heat flux through the building envelope and the ventilation in the passive house dwelling. Finally, the analysis reveals that, in order to increase this cooling capacity, it is more convenient the improvement of the heat exchangers between the thermoelectric modules and the cooling air stream, rather than increasing the number of modules.Publication Open Access Annual energy performance of a thermoelectric heat pump combined with a heat recovery unit to HVAC one passive house dwelling(Elsevier, 2022) Díaz de Garayo, Sergio; Martínez Echeverri, Álvaro; Astrain Ulibarrena, David; Ingeniería; Ingeniaritza; Institute of Smart Cities - ISCThis paper proposes a HVAC system that integrates a thermoelectric heat pump with a double flux ventilation system and a sensible heat recovery unit able to provide heating, cooling and ventilation to a 74.3 m2 Passive House certified dwelling in Pamplona (Spain). This study computationally investigates the energy performance of the system and the comfort conditions of the dwelling for one year long. The thermoelectric HVAC system maintains adequate comfort conditions with an indoor temperature between 20–23 °C in wintertime and 23–25 °C during summer, thanks to the precise control of the voltage supplied to the thermoelectric heat pump that can regulate the heating/cooling capacity from 5 to 100 %. The system consumes 1143.3 kWh/y (15.3 kWh/m2y) of electric energy, that can be provided by 4 photovoltaic panels of 250 Wp each. This system is then compared with a vapor compression heat pump with a COP of 4.5. The vapor compression system reduces the electric energy consumption by 36.1 % with respect to the thermoelectric system, which allows saving only 270 Wp (1–2 PV panels). This demonstrates the promising application of thermoelectricity for HVAC in passive houses.Publication Open Access Prototype of an air to air thermoelectric heat pump integrated with a double flux mechanical ventilation system for passive houses(Elsevier, 2021) Díaz de Garayo, Sergio; Martínez Echeverri, Álvaro; Aranguren Garacochea, Patricia; Astrain Ulibarrena, David; Ingeniería; Ingeniaritza; Institute of Smart Cities - ISCThis paper describes the design of an air-to-air thermoelectric heat pump for its integration with a double flux mechanical ventilation system for domestic use in Passive House standard. The prototype has been built and thermally characterized in a test bench reproducing winter and summer conditions, with different gaps between indoor and outdoor temperatures. In addition, two different integration possibilities have been analyzed and tested: a stand-alone installation and the combination with a heat recovery unit. This prototype is composed of 10 thermoelectric modules and finned heat pipes to transfer the heat between the modules and the incoming and outgoing ventilation flows. The maximum heating capacity with 12 V supply was proven to be 1,250 W for heating and 375 W for cooling, with COPs ranging 1.5–4 and 0.5–2.5 respectively. Results show the variations in the performance of the thermoelectric heat pump depending on the voltage supply (3–12 V), the air flows (55–130 m3/h) and the temperature gaps between them. This paper demonstrates the convenience of combining passive and active heat recovery technologies (thermoelectric pump coupled to a heat recovery unit), bringing improvements on the thermal power higher than 25% for heating and 10% for cooling, with respect to the thermoelectric heat pump working directly between the incoming and outgoing air flows. The COP is also increased, especially for low energy demands, when the voltage is 3–6 V. In these cases, the COP might be improved by 50% for heating and 30% for cooling.