Tuesday, November 13, 2012

How do we heat?

I have been looking into this a lot and so has our first choice for a GC, Al.  It seems we are set on a Geothermal heat-pump system that would provide heat to some sort of radiant heating system.



At this point in the selection of the best radiant system I have seen a lot of talk that the best way to use a geothermal heat-pump water system would be to use in floor radiant (http://www.advancedsolutions.ca/geothermal.html).
 The issues with this system at our current level of planning is that we have a one floor, no basement, concrete slab directly under the floor.  So one might say that it is an obvious choice to put radiant into the slab because it's the easiest way to go....but I don't buy that it is more efficient in this situation because I wonder just how much of that heat is going to be dumped *under* the house and just disappear forever.  So another solution to the in-floor problem is an idea that I just had, so it's a little rough.  We put down a "sub-floor" of 1"or 2" high-density polystyrene foam and then lay the in-floor radiant on top of that.  Maybe the foam could even be foil backed to reflect the most amount of radiant heat back into the home.

Another solution to the heating problem is to use baseboard heating.
 Again looking at the literature I have only seen comments against this because baseboards work best with 180 F water, and most geothermal systems will output 140 F water.  But what if the geothermal is just a pre-heater, then another water heater could be used to bump the temperature up to the required baseboard heat.  This has the hitch of needing two systems to get the water up to temp if my thinking is correct.  Additionally would we be able to use that water heater as a dual purpose; for the residential water and the heating.  Maybe we just need a geothermal system with a heating loop and a residential loop in the heat exchanger?

Yes, a lot of this is rambling, trying to at least get ideas onto 'paper' as it were.  But I wouldn't mind some outside input either, to know if anyone has even heard of doing this and the possible logistical difficulties with any of these plans.  A lot of people push you towards forced air because you get 'free' cooling, but we plan on essentially passive cooling by designing our roof to block the sun in summer and planting the appropriate trees to increase that level of blocking.

So again, still mostly in the planning phase for this but trying to come up with a realistic solution is quite varied and they all have pros and cons.