Heat Pumps
The great advantage of using a heat pump to keep your home warm, rather than just burning fuel, is that a heat pump supplies . Heat transfer is from the outside air, even at a temperature below freezing, to the indoor space. You only pay for , and you get an additional heat transfer of from the outside at no cost; in many cases, at least twice as much energy is transferred to the heated space as is used to run the heat pump. When you burn fuel to keep warm, you pay for all of it. The disadvantage is that the work input (required by the second law of thermodynamics) is sometimes more expensive than simply burning fuel, especially if the work is done by electrical energy.
The basic components of a heat pump in its heating mode are shown in Figure 15.29. A working fluid such as a non-CFC refrigerant is used. In the outdoor coils (the evaporator), heat transfer occurs to the working fluid from the cold outdoor air, turning it into a gas.
The electrically driven compressor (work input ) raises the temperature and pressure of the gas and forces it into the condenser coils that are inside the heated space. Because the temperature of the gas is higher than the temperature inside the room, heat transfer to the room occurs and the gas condenses to a liquid. The liquid then flows back through a pressure-reducing valve to the outdoor evaporator coils, being cooled through expansion. In a cooling cycle, the evaporator and condenser coils exchange roles and the flow direction of the fluid is reversed.
The quality of a heat pump is judged by how much heat transfer occurs into the warm space compared with how much work input is required. In the spirit of taking the ratio of what you get to what you spend, we define a heat pump's coefficient of performance () to be
15.37
Since the efficiency of a heat engine is , we see that , an important and interesting fact. First, since the efficiency of any heat engine is less than one, it means that is always greater than one—that is, a heat pump always has more heat transfer than work put into it. Second, it means that heat pumps work best when temperature differences are small. The efficiency of a perfect, or Carnot, engine is ; thus, the smaller the temperature difference, the smaller the efficiency and the greater the (because ). In other words, heat pumps do not work as well in very cold climates as they do in more moderate climates.
Friction and other irreversible processes reduce heat engine efficiency, but they do not benefit the operation of a heat pump—instead, they reduce the work input by converting part of it to heat transfer back into the cold reservoir before it gets into the heat pump.
Example 15.5 The Best COP hp of a Heat Pump for Home Use
A heat pump used to warm a home must employ a cycle that produces a working fluid at temperatures greater than typical indoor temperature so that heat transfer to the inside can take place. Similarly, it must produce a working fluid at temperatures that are colder than the outdoor temperature so that heat transfer occurs from outside. Its hot and cold reservoir temperatures therefore cannot be too close, placing a limit on its . (See Figure 15.31.) What is the best coefficient of performance possible for such a heat pump, if it has a hot reservoir temperature of and a cold reservoir temperature of ?
Strategy
A Carnot engine reversed will give the best possible performance as a heat pump. As noted above, , so that we need to first calculate the Carnot efficiency to solve this problem.
Solution
Carnot efficiency in terms of absolute temperature is given by
15.38
The temperatures in kelvins are and , so that
15.39 Thus, from the discussion above,
15.40
or
15.41
so that
15.42
Discussion
This result means that the heat transfer by the heat pump is 5.30 times as much as the work put into it. It would cost 5.30 times as much for the same heat transfer by an electric room heater as it does for that produced by this heat pump. This is not a violation of conservation of energy. Cold ambient air provides 4.3 J per 1 J of work from the electrical outlet.
Real heat pumps do not perform quite as well as the ideal one in the previous example; their values of range from about two to four. This range means that the heat transfer from the heat pumps is two to four times as great as the work put into them. Their economical feasibility is still limited, however, since is usually supplied by electrical energy that costs more per joule than heat transfer by burning fuels like natural gas. Furthermore, the initial cost of a heat pump is greater than that of many furnaces, so that a heat pump must last longer for its cost to be recovered. Heat pumps are most likely to be economically superior where winter temperatures are mild, electricity is relatively cheap, and other fuels are relatively expensive. Also, since they can cool as well as heat a space, they have advantages where cooling in summer months is also desired. Thus, some of the best locations for heat pumps are in warm summer climates with cool winters. Figure 15.32 shows a heat pump, called a reverse cycle or split-system cooler in some countries.