A study of membrane properties on air conditioning performance

Master of Science === Department of Chemical Engineering === Mary E. Rezac === Mary E. Rezac === Energy consumption due to heating, ventilation, and air conditioning amounts to 10-20% of global electrical energy usage. Air conditioning alone uses one trillion kilowatt hours globally. This energy is...

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Main Author: Boyer, Elizabeth J.
Language:en_US
Published: Kansas State University 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/15758
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spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-157582017-03-03T15:44:56Z A study of membrane properties on air conditioning performance Boyer, Elizabeth J. Membrane Air conditioning Energy savings Chemical Engineering (0542) Engineering (0537) Mechanical Engineering (0548) Master of Science Department of Chemical Engineering Mary E. Rezac Mary E. Rezac Energy consumption due to heating, ventilation, and air conditioning amounts to 10-20% of global electrical energy usage. Air conditioning alone uses one trillion kilowatt hours globally. This energy is required for the dehumidification of air in addition to its cooling. New membrane technologies have the potential to decrease air conditioning energy requirements by significant amounts. A membrane acts as a partial heat and mass exchanger in conjunction with a traditional air conditioning system to remove water content and reduce the cooling load. Membranes vary according to their properties and method of mass transport. Liquid membranes have high permeability and selectivity, dense membranes have high selectivity and low permeability, and porous membranes have low selectivity and high permeability. A theoretical model was created to observe how membrane properties affected the potential energy savings of such systems. The most influential properties were flow rate, water permeability and selectivity, membrane area and thickness, and the purge flow temperature. Other properties were determined to be minimally important such as outdoor temperature and humidity. The effect on energy savings in many cases was not a linear relationship but suggested an optimal value beyond which energy savings did not significantly increase. The best simulations showed electrical energy savings of 86-95%. 2013-05-08T12:52:05Z 2013-05-08T12:52:05Z 2013-05-08 2013 May Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2097/15758 en_US Kansas State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Membrane
Air conditioning
Energy savings
Chemical Engineering (0542)
Engineering (0537)
Mechanical Engineering (0548)
spellingShingle Membrane
Air conditioning
Energy savings
Chemical Engineering (0542)
Engineering (0537)
Mechanical Engineering (0548)
Boyer, Elizabeth J.
A study of membrane properties on air conditioning performance
description Master of Science === Department of Chemical Engineering === Mary E. Rezac === Mary E. Rezac === Energy consumption due to heating, ventilation, and air conditioning amounts to 10-20% of global electrical energy usage. Air conditioning alone uses one trillion kilowatt hours globally. This energy is required for the dehumidification of air in addition to its cooling. New membrane technologies have the potential to decrease air conditioning energy requirements by significant amounts. A membrane acts as a partial heat and mass exchanger in conjunction with a traditional air conditioning system to remove water content and reduce the cooling load. Membranes vary according to their properties and method of mass transport. Liquid membranes have high permeability and selectivity, dense membranes have high selectivity and low permeability, and porous membranes have low selectivity and high permeability. A theoretical model was created to observe how membrane properties affected the potential energy savings of such systems. The most influential properties were flow rate, water permeability and selectivity, membrane area and thickness, and the purge flow temperature. Other properties were determined to be minimally important such as outdoor temperature and humidity. The effect on energy savings in many cases was not a linear relationship but suggested an optimal value beyond which energy savings did not significantly increase. The best simulations showed electrical energy savings of 86-95%.
author Boyer, Elizabeth J.
author_facet Boyer, Elizabeth J.
author_sort Boyer, Elizabeth J.
title A study of membrane properties on air conditioning performance
title_short A study of membrane properties on air conditioning performance
title_full A study of membrane properties on air conditioning performance
title_fullStr A study of membrane properties on air conditioning performance
title_full_unstemmed A study of membrane properties on air conditioning performance
title_sort study of membrane properties on air conditioning performance
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/15758
work_keys_str_mv AT boyerelizabethj astudyofmembranepropertiesonairconditioningperformance
AT boyerelizabethj studyofmembranepropertiesonairconditioningperformance
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