Passive Cooling
by Douglas JE Barnes and Scott A. Meister
Part I) Passive Cooling and Zeer PotsBy Scott A. Meister If you happen to live in an area that depends on a lot of electricity, and you’re finding electricity to be rather expensive...or would rather wisely eliminate as much of that expense as possible so you could spend your hard earned money on other things, then you need to be looking for ways to reduce or eliminate your electrical use as much as possible. Where can we cut our electric bills? We’ve all heard of changing our lightbulbs to the new and improved warm fluorescents (no, they no longer turn your skin green). Of course, we can shut off our lights when we’re not in a room, shut off all electrical appliances we aren’t actually using. After all, there’s really no need to have all the lights on in the house, the stereo blazing and the TV on with no sound while we browse the internet. Those kinds of things are easy to see, and cutting back on them does a lot of good. But a large portion of the energy going into a household is actually used for heating and cooling rooms, food and beverages. Even if you think you’re rich enough to waste your money on electricity, you still need to be concerned about emergency situations when the power companies stop giving you what you need. If you lived through the LA blackouts as I did...then you know what I mean. Believe it or not...there are a number of free and effective ways to nip your electrical cooling bill in the bud while also be prepared for power-outages. We can consider passive solar cooling and air-conditioning. Please note that we are not talking about the use of photovoltaic solar panels, those are active solar devices. I’m talking about passive solar cooling. A lot of people have trouble imagining that the hot summer sun, can actually cool your house, but it can. The second law of thermodynamics is our best friend, and it works endlessly for free (or at least as long as the sun exists). Heat rises, and heat will always move toward cooler areas, and if it happens to draw liquid with it, and that liquid evaporates...the inside surface of what just evaporated will be cooler. Solar chimneys, underground cool rooms (the old fashioned cellar), and the zeer pot, are just a few ways that use this to our advantage to help us cut your power needs forever, and for free. After all, isn’t that what we all want? Why should we slave away at work all day and then spend our hard earned money on things that we can get for free?
Although many people are excited about promoting this technology in developing countries, I see greater potential for this technology in the developed western cities, suburbs and countryside.
For further information on zeer pots, please see the following sites: http://www.rolexawards.com/laureates/laureate-6-bah_abba.html http://www.slashfood.com/2006/09/28/how-cool-is-that-zeer-pot/ http://www.scidev.net/features/index.cfm?fuseaction=printarticle&itemid=315&language=1 Part II) Passive Air-Conditioning and Refrigerationby Douglas JE Barnes In permaculture, we look to a problem as being a solution. Much money is spent battling the cold in places like Canada, Scandinavia, Scotland, Tasmania, Russia, Argentina, and so on. But the cold can also be a valuable resource. Unfortunately, the cold is a largely untapped resource in most places. That said, there are some hopeful developments being made. For example, many office towers in Toronto, Canada are now cooled using a deep water cooling system that draws frigid water from Lake Ontario. While the buildings themselves are not sustainable, this method is less energy intensive than powering large air conditioning units to cool each building. There are techniques for the rest of us – passive cooling techniques – that we can use to beat the heat. Food needs to be kept cool for preservation purposes. The zeer pot described above is one cheap solution. But if one has the means, it is possible to design a passive cold cupboard that doesn’t require energy to operate. In almost any region of the Earth, the ground is going to be cooler than the surrounding air in the summer season (areas of geothermal activity are an exception to this and offer heating potential instead of cooling potential). A cold cupboard makes it possible to replace a large part of one’s cooling needs with a system requiring no outside energy inputs.
One variation on this is the have one end open to the surface and draw the air out through a vent pipe as is done in the cold cupboard described above.
Another strategy put into effect in tropical and sub-tropical areas is the shade house. A shade house is simple an area on the shaded side of a home with a vine-covered trellis to create a shaded sanctuary. Often these shade houses will contain an outside kitchen to prevent the heat of cooking from entering the home. Subtropical areas would have two kitchens, one inside for the winter, and one outside for the summer. Urban temperate areas suffering from the thermal island effect would also benefit greatly by the shade house strategy.
These strategies are not only sustainable cooling solutions, they also save money by using available cold as a resource. Editorial NotesSee Permaculture Reflections for more of Scott and Douglas' writing. According to the IEA: Electricity consumption by 107 million U.S. households in 2001 totaled 1,140 billion kWh. The most significant end uses were central air-conditioning and refrigerators, each of which accounted for about 14 percent of the U.S. total. These strategies outlined by Douglas and Scott show how we can radically reduce that while still living in relative comfort. See also Man Retrofits Freezer to Make an Ultra-Efficient Fridge over at Treehugger. An off-grid experimenter in Australia, Tom Chalko, has retrofitted a chest freezer to create a fridge that uses only 100 watt-hours (0.1 kWh) per day! Tom's tests were done in winter, but nevertheless, a very impressive energy saving. The average American fridge by comparision uses 4 kWh/d. I've been working on a cheaper and simpler option than Tom's in the last week, simply wiring in an off-the-shelf replacement refrigerator thermostat into a small chest freezer. I've had some success, although because the temperature probe is longer than the one it is replacing, half of it doesn't fit, and I think as a result I can't get the temperature above 2°C (36°F), whereas I'd like to run it at around 8-10 for minimal energy use. I'll try to write something up about it when I figure it out! Original article available here |
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