ground-source heating
ground-Source
Heating
and
cooling
by SETH MASIA
Seth Masia is managing
editor of SOLAR TODA Y
magazine. Contact him at
smasia@solartoday.org.
Ground-source heat-pump (GSHP) heating and cooling, often called a geo-exchange or geothermal system, is an efficient way to keep a house comfortable. The Environ- mental Protection Agency says a GSHP
system can save 50 to 60 percent on a typical home heating
bill. About 1 million GSHP systems are currently in use
in the United States, and about 50,000 new systems are
installed annually.
How it works: A heat pump works like a refrigerator: It
uses a fluid and a compressor to move heat from one side
of a wall to the other. A refrigerator chills the air inside by
warming the air outside; an air-exchange heat pump does the
opposite, warming the air inside the house by cooling the air
outside. Think of it as an air conditioner turned backward.
A ground-source heat pump does the same thing, but it
works off the stable temperature of the soil or groundwa-ter under your property. Depending on your geology and
climate, the soil beneath your house and yard remains at a
remarkably stable temperature year round — in most parts
of the country, that’s within a few degrees of 55°F ( 12°C).
A network of pipes buried in the soil can function as a heat
exchanger, keeping its working fluid at ground temperature
(the heat-transfer fluid can be water, water mixed with antifreeze, or a refrigerant). The heat-pump compressor uses
the transferred heat to warm the inside of the house without
directly burning fuel.
Components: A small house typically requires about 3
tons of heating/cooling capacity, equivalent to about 10. 5
kilowatts. A system of this size might use about 1,500 feet
A ground-source heat
pump system can
save 50 to 60 percent
on a typical home
heating bill.
SetH MASiA
(about 450 meters) of tubing buried in loops near the house
(the length of the tube will vary with climate). An electric
pump sends the working fluid through this loop field. A heat
pump replaces the original furnace or boiler. This unit transfers heat from the loop field to the inside of the house.
Most systems use polyethylene tubing as the buried loop
field and pump water through it. Modern “direct exchange,”
or DX, systems use a loop field of copper tubing filled with a
refrigerant. This arrangement is more expensive to purchase
because of the cost of the copper and refrigerant, but the
system may be less expensive to install because the buried
loop is shorter. It’s also less expensive to operate because
the refrigerant-to-earth heat exchange is more efficient than
interposing a water-to-refrigerant heat exchanger.
The heat pump inside the house can come in two flavors: water-to-air and water-to-water. A water-to-air pump
heats air for a forced-air heating duct system. A water-to-water pump heats water for circulation through a hot-water
or radiant-floor heating system. A hybrid system heats both
air and water — you could have both forced air and radiant
heat or use the hot-water output to augment the domestic
hot water supply.
Cost, payback: The U.S. Department of Energy estimates that a GSHP system costs about $2,500 per ton of
capacity, or roughly $7,500 for a 3-ton unit. Energy savings
may provide payback in about five years.
For installation considerations, see the Department of
Energy website: tinyurl.com/doegeopump.
For Energy Star ratings of ground-source heat pumps,
see tinyurl.com/energystargeopump. GS