Technical Notes
Radiant Panel Assocation, PO Box 717, Loveland, CO 80539 (970) 613-0100
RADIANT FLOOR COOLING
We get inquiries at the RPA office regarding radiant floor cooling on
a regular basis. It is a natural question. Once the decision is made to
use radiant floor heating, cooling becomes the next issue to resolve.
Compromise
It is reasoned that a forced air distribution system can be used to both
heat and cool, why not radiant floors? This is logical reasoning and needs
to be addressed, but first we should recognize that adding air-conditioning
to a forced air heating system requires compromise as well. In most forced
air heating systems the heat is delivered via floor registers. Because warm
air rises, floor registers are designed to blow the air horizontally along
the floor as far as possible before it rises to the ceiling. Even though
this is fairly ineffective with hot air, it works quite well with cold air
which would like to stay on the floor anyway. The result is cold air moving
across the floor to the cold air return which is normally located low on
a central wall. Chilly drafts of very cold air can be unpleasant even when
it is 90°F outside. The better place, of course, for forced air cooling
ducts is the ceiling, dispensing low velocity cool (not cold) air evenly
across the ceiling where it gently drops to cold air returns in the floor.
This is seldom done.
A similar compromise is made with radiant floor cooling. The cool surface
ends up being at the low point where the coolest air is, therefore little
natural convection takes place. Close to half the output of a heated floor
is from natural convection, cool air coming in contact with the warm floor,
rising, giving up heat and falling to be heated once again. Without the
assistance of natural convection, floor cooling capacity is about half that
of floor heating. As may be obvious at this point, a cooled ceiling has
much more cooling capacity than a cooled floor because rising warm air will
contact the ceiling, be cooled, fall to the room below where it will absorb
heat and rise to be cooled again.
Humidity Issue
Whether a chilled ceiling or a chilled floor is used for space cooling,
both systems need to be in a humidity controlled environment. If the system
is installed in one of the arid regions of the country, humidity control
may not be an issue but in most parts of North America a cooled floor or
ceiling will cause moist air to condense on the surface if the surface temperature
is below the dew point. With 70% relative humidity condensation will occur
on a 68°F surface, 62.2°F at a 60% relative humidity. This means
that some type of air handling device which removes humidity must also be
incorporated into the system to keep the relative humidity below 70%.
Added Dimension
Does this mean that radiant panels should not be used for cooling? Not necessarily.
Radiant cooling adds a dimension not attainable by forced air cooling systems.
It is the same component that is missing in forced air heating... radiant
transfer. Since some of the heat we reject is in the form of radiation,
a large cool surface provides a heat sink to draw heat away from our bodies.
Heat that can be radiated away reduces the amount that must be convected
away and therefore allows us to feel comfortable at a higher air temperature.
This, of course, converts into energy savings as well as overall better
comfort.
Guidelines
Bjarne W. Olesen, Ph.D. is head of research and development at D.F. Liedelt
"Velta" GmbH, in Norderstedt, Germany, president of the European
Radiant Floor Association, and an active participant in ASHRAE. In his paper
"Possibilities and Limitations of Radiant Floor Cooling" presented
at ASHRAE, Dr. Olesen gives the following guidelines for designing radiant
floor cooling systems. In spaces with seated or standing people, the floor
temperature should not be lower than 66°F for comfort reasons except
in areas of higher activity level. The heat exchange coefficient between
a cooled floor and the room is typically around 1.23 Btu/ft2·hr·°F
where 0.97 Btu/ft2·hr·°F is radiant heat transfer. Taking
into consideration the maximum operative temperature comfort limit of 79°F
for seated individuals, the maximum cooling capacity for a floor system
is about 16 Btu/hr·ft2. Dr. Olesen also points out that in spaces
with significant direct sunshine on the floor, capacity may double or even
triple.
Tube size and spacing can also have an affect on cooling capacity. A
floor heating system is often designed with tube spacing of six inches or
more. To increase the cooling capacity, it may be necessary to design with
closer spacing. Carpet and pad may decrease the cooling capacity by as much
as 50%. To avoid supply water temperatures that are too low, supply and
return water temperature differences should be kept between 5° to 9°F.
Where it makes sense
Floor cooling makes the most sense when it is being used in conjunction
with an air system. The floor may handle most of the sensible load, while
the air system will take care of the latent load. The result is a comfort
level not attainable by either system independently. It will also be more
energy efficient.
Making choices
While waiting for the floor cooling market to develop and manufacturers
to provide packages, it may be wiser to invest in alternative cooling options
such as split ductless and high velocity air conditioning systems. Even
a simple ducted fan coil can be cost effective. On the other hand, if you
like adventure and willing to do some experimentation, radiant cooling could
play a significant part in the future of our industry and you may get in
on the ground floor. After all, radiant ceiling and floor cooling is the
biggest thing to hit Europe since radiant heating.