The Fix
To say this system is a piping aberration is going easy on it.
1. The indirect water heater should not
interact with the buffer tank when it needs heat. The indirect tank has
sufficient thermal mass of its own to prevent boiler short cycling. Even if the
zone valve leading to the indirect opens when the tank aquastat calls for heat
there would be very little flow through the tank. Most of the flow created by
the buffer tank circulator would just do a U-turn at the closely spaced tees
and head back into the buffer tank.
2. When it operates, the boiler circulator
would create differential pressure between the headers at the top of the
schematic. Although the zone valves would likely not bleed hot water to their
zones when closed, it is very likely there will be unexpected flow into the two
zones using circulators. The forward opening resistance of their check valves
would not be able to hold back the differential pressure created by the boiler
circulator.
3. The boiler circulator is pumping toward the
expansion tank connection point. It should be pumping away from this point.
4.
The circulators are shown with their inlet very close to the supply header. There
should be at least 12 pipe diameters of straight pipe leading into the
circulators.
5. There is no differential pressure bypass
valve shown on the headers serving the zone valves.
6. The
left-most zone circuit will not be able to draw heated water from the buffer
tank.
7. Although the heat exchanger of the indirect tank
has its inlet at the top and outlet at the bottom, the temperature gradient
inside the tank is inverted. This would imply upside down temperature
stratification, and nature is not going to allow that. (Just seeing if you’re
paying attention.)
The fix drawing shows all corrections to
the above problems.
The indirect water heater is piped as a
separate circuit, and would likely operate with priority control.
Upon
a call for space heating, the system’s controls check to see if the buffer tank
is sufficiently warm to serve as the heat source. If so, the boiler is not
fired, the boiler circulator remains off, and the buffer tank circulator
operates. When the buffer tank has cooled through its differential, the boiler
fires and the boiler circulator operates. The buffer tank circulator remains
on. Heated water is supplied to the active zone(s), and any access heat is
routed to the buffer tank, causing its temperature to rise. If the buffer tank
climbs back up to its upper temperature setting the boiler and boiler
circulator are turned off, and the above sequence repeats itself.
A
spring-load check valve at the top outlet of the buffer tank helps prevent heat
migration.
By: Dr. Dew
Posted: June 5, 2009 7:12 AM
#2 I knew that this Glitch was identical or similar to a previous one.
Nov. 2007 is a close cousin
Keep up this interesting series
By: site manager
Posted: June 8, 2009 11:04 AM