3 design and function, 1 the heat pump in general, Design and function 3.1 the heat pump in general – REMKO WKF 120 Duo User Manual

Page 21: Design and function, The heat pump in general

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3

Design and function

3.1

The heat pump in general

Arguments for REMKO inverter heat pumps

n

Low heating costs in comparison to oil and gas

n

Heat pumps represent a contribution to envi-

ronmental protection

n

Lower CO

2

emissions in comparison to oil and

gas heating

n

All models are able to cool as well as heat

n

Low noise-level of the outdoor unit

n

Flexible installation due to split system design

n

Negligible maintenance costs.

75%* of the heat

comes from the air,

free of charge

75%

freesolar energy
from the air

*

25%

electrical drive energy

*

Heating

Fig. 21: Heat free of charge

* The relationship can vary depending on outside temperature and operating conditions.

Economical and environmentally-conscious

heating

The burning of fossil-based energy sources in

order to generate power creates severe conse-

quences for the environment. A high percentage of

fossil fuels is also problematic due to the limited

resources of oil and gas and the price increases

resulting from this. For this reason, many people

today are thinking both economically and environ-

mentally-consciously in terms of heating. The

application of heat pump technology enables both

of these concepts to be combined. It makes use of

the energy which is permanently available in the

air, water and soil and converts it into usable

heating energy by means of inputting electrical

energy. However, in order to generate a heat con-

tent of 4 kWh, it is only necessary to input approxi-

mately 1 kWh of electricity. The rest is made avail-

able free-of-charge by the environment.

Heat source

There are essentially three heat sources from

which heat pumps can derive energy: air, soil and

groundwater. Air heat pumps have the advantage

that air as a source heat is available everywhere in

unlimited quantities that can be used free of

charge. A disadvantage is that the outside air is at

its coldest when the heat requirement is greatest.

Brine heat pumps extract energy from the soil. This

is undertaken in serpentine pipe networks which

are laid approx. 1m deep or placed by means of

drilling. The disadvantage is the large space

requirements for the serpentine pipe networks or

the high cost of drilling. A long-term cooling of

the soil is also a possibility.

21

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