Heating And Cooling With Geothermal Heat Pumps

by robhowells87
Heating And Cooling With Geothermal Heat Pumps
The term geothermal literally means Earth/Ground (Geo) Heat (thermal). Geothermal, or ground source heat pumps, take advantage of the constant ground or groundwater temperatures. These heat pumps use geothermal energy to heat and/or cool your home.
A refrigerant loop with a compressor extracts heat from one side (the ground) and pumps it to the heating loop in your home. It is essentially the same process that happens in your refrigerator: heat is extracted via a compressor and refrigerant loop from the inside of your refrigerator/freezer and rejected into your house.
In the summer the geothermal heat pump reverses its cycle, if you have an air-conditioning system, and heat from the home is rejected into the ground or ground water.
What makes geothermal heat pumps such a good choice for residential heating and cooling is that they do not depend on outside air temperatures. These heat pumps will heat your home as efficiently on a windy, zero-degree winter day as on a 40-degree day. Provided of course, that your house is well insulated and tight.
Geothermal heat pumps are also a very efficient way for heating and cooling your home. They use 25-50% less energy than conventional heating and cooling systems (Source: US DOE).
Residential applications of geothermal energy systems use water-to-water or water-to-air heat pumps.
Water-to-Water Geothermal Heat Pumps
Water-to-water geothermal heat pumps are generally used for heating only. They replace the gas or oil furnace that you might currently have to heat your home and water with.
It is important to know that heat pumps work most effectively when the temperature difference between the heat source (ground) and heat sink (floor heat or radiators) is small.
Ground temperatures range anywhere from 50 to 75 degF, depending on where you live. This means that geothermal heat pumps are generally not suitable for standard hot water baseboard applications, which are designed for heating water temperatures of 180 degF. Floor heat and low-temperature radiators require water temperatures in the range of 95 to 140 degF.
Some newer heat pump models are now equipped with so-called desuperheaters that can transfer excess heat from the geothermal heat pump compressor to the domestic water heater. Your geothermal heat pump can also effectively and quickly heat water for your bathtub, shower and sinks.
Water-To-Air Geothermal Heat Pumps
These types of ground source heat pumps are generally used when you need air conditioning. The Water is the heat sink, where you reject the heat from the house. The Air is the air that is distributed through your home via ductwork.
Otherwise, these heat pumps function the same way as water-to-water heat pumps. And again, the efficiency of a geothermal heating and cooling system is far better than that of a traditional system.
Important To Know
The first step towards making a geothermal heat pump system be a reliable and efficient heating (and cooling) system for your home is to minimize the heating and cooling requirements with a well-insulated building envelope and strategically placed windows for passive solar gain.
Not only is your first cost reduced, because your system will be smaller. You will also tremendously increase the comfort of your home.
Geothermal heat pump systems are best designed and installed by professionals. It is not recommended to DIY. These systems must meet specific requirements. Especially the piping laid out in the ground, or down to the ground water table, must be designed and installed correctly to ensure that your geothermal heat pump system works as intended.
Christiane Perrin is a registered professional HVAC engineer with a passion for the environment. She is excited about the building industry going green and wants to support homeowners on their journey to building and remodeling green homes. http://www.greenandsustainablebuildings.com
A look back to when and where Geothermal technologies were created and what is being done now in California to utilize this great clean power source
| Print article | This entry was posted by mosotech on September 21, 2010 at 2:11 am, and is filed under Geothermal Energy. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |


about 1 year ago
geothermal is the way to go. well done Italian.
about 1 year ago
Here in Brazil, there isn’t any geothermal energy produced.
about 1 year ago
Ha, I pay nearly 20 cents per Kwh in Texas, I’m ready for any solution or any help. Last month I had a 307 dollar electric bill in an apartment, and we keep the A/C at 78.
about 1 year ago
The Capra clip from Unchained Goddess was made in 1958 (note year in Roman
numerals on title clip). It was one of 4 movies coproduced by AT&T, Bell Science &
Capra as a television science educational series about the universe around us.
They became science class favorites shown in 16mm format (ref imdb). Indeed this youtube video is very informative!!
about 1 year ago
I’ve had a ground source system since August 2006. My house has about 2000 sqft of climatized space. I have paid $75/mo for electricity on average over the past 16 months. That includes hvac, cooking, lights and hot water. My power company charges $0.046 per kwh which is very cheap. Our rates just went up this month. I should still be paying less than $100 on average. This system is the future. It’s expensive at first but the payback is short with today’s fuel prices.
about 1 year ago
Could it be the same bunch that killed the electric car? hmmmm
about 1 year ago
nice use of the old film! this is great – and frankly holds a solution not even being addressed! wonder why that is. hmm, could it be the big money placed in our politician’s pockets by oil and coal? hmmm.
about 1 year ago
great question!
about 1 year ago
Surprising how old geothermal is. Capra is shocking too.
about 1 year ago
Amazing footage from the early 60′s and great treatment of geothermal. One of the more informative videos I’ve seen on YouTube
about 1 year ago
hydro temp com
full 100% hot water on demand
full in floor radiant is separately in the same unit for all HVAC simultaniously
about 1 year ago
i thnik that guy was onto something way back when, why didnt we listen then?
about 1 year ago
this is baaaad? LAWL