Topher Belknap wrote:
What about thermosiphoning?
90%RH air at 70°F most certainly WILL condense (both in the house and in the rock storage at 65°F! . . .
Topher Belknap wrote:
Control logic doesn't DO anything. What are the OUTPUTS and what do they do.
In normal service, I don't see how condensation would happen. There is no source of moisture but the air, and there is pretty much no way to get below about 65 F.
Why do you think 65°F is some magical condensation prevention? . . .
Topher Belknap wrote:
Which brings me back to my original point. Why an air-to-rock system instead of an easier water-to-rock system? Especially when you already have a water system. Why add in another system using air?
P.P.S. The daytime system will be totally different - water recirculates between heat collectors and radiators inside. The thing about pebble bed heat storage is you cannot charge it and discharge it at the same time.
I have seen designs that did. Fortunately, I was able to talk those people out of the idea of air-to-rock storage altogether. You certainly can heat your house, and store surplus in rock at the same time, which would seem to me to be sufficient. . . .
Topher Belknap wrote:
You mentioned this before; what I am wondering is how you get from this 'not allowed' condition back into an allowed condition. Once the rocks are cooler than the dewpoint of the air, how do you correct that condition?
Topher Belknap wrote:
How are you going to prevent condensation? I don't see what mechanism your proposed controller has to adjust the condensing point of the storage. I don't see any method for removing moisture from the air. I do know a number of people with blocked off rock heat storage systems, that developed mold. Near the end of summer, you will need to transition from not storing heat, to storing heat. The storage will be cooler than room temperature (otherwise it would baking the house in summer). If your summer/fall are similar to mine, you will be in a high humidity situation outside. What happens next?
Topher Belknap wrote: Next question, what are you doing to get rid of that condition? With the fans off, the collectors are going to get hotter, but they are never going to reduce the dew point of that air. 80°F at 40% relative humidity becomes 120°F at 12% RH, but still the water will condense at 53°F. . . .
Topher Belknap wrote:
The condensation is a central issue. Inadequacies in control can cause condensation, and I'm not aware of any commercially available control equipment that can do it. What I am doing is designing PLC-controlled custom one-off equipment where condensation will not be allowed.
Could you be a little more specific on what you mean by 'not allowed'? If your storage rocks are say 50°F, your air from the solar is 80°F at 40% RH, what is the controller doing to prevent condensation? . . .
Topher Belknap wrote:You are going to need tens of thousands of BTUs to heat the building over the night. . . . .