Homemade water to water heat pump help
I built a heat pump for educational purposes and I want to determine how efficient it was operating. Very roughly I think I figured it out but my method was ugly. Feel free to rip apart my build because I'd love to improve it. Currently using plain propane from a small torch cylinder. I intentionally used a needle valve just to play around and watch what happens when I increase or decrease refrigerant flow on it and thats also why I permanently installed gauges into it. They were also cheaper than buying a manifold gauge set.
I had the evaporator side of the heat pump connected to the Garden hose with a constant temperature water flowing through it. I did not measure the temperature of that water because I thought it didn't matter.
on the condenser side the inlet water was 65.1 degrees Fahrenheit and the outlet water temp was 81.5 degrees Fahrenheit. so a change in temperature of 16.4 degrees Fahrenheit. I assumed that time and volume of water would be important so I timed the water flow into a jug with a 2 quart measurement and it took 73 seconds to fill it. I measured the power draw from the compressor and it was 258 watts. I did not consider the power draw from the pump in this but I guess for complete accuracy it should be included.
So here's my ugly math
2 quarts = 4 pounds of water
raising 1 pound of water 16.4 degrees would be 16.4 Btu so 4 pounds would be 65.6 Btu.
3600(seconds in an hour)/73 seconds=49.32
65.6Btu x 49.32=3,235 Btu/hour?..... This is where it got ugly.
I found an online calculator to convert my 3,235 Btu/hour into watts and got 948 watts.
If I divide the 948 watts by the 258 watts of the compressor draw I get 3.67.
Does that math out right? would my rough COP be equal to 3.67? I didn't do anything to insulate the condenser or capture heat from the compressor so with some work I could possibly push that up past 4 which seems pretty good for a DIY garage build.
|