Normal/typical plug loads are accounted for (inferred) automatically within FEDS. These values can be viewed and/or changed from the miscellaneous equipment inputs in maximum detail display. The data is based on major end-use load surveys for typical plug load levels and accounts for the typical levels of equipment loads in a given use-area type. For example, for an office building this will account for typical levels of things, such as computers, printers, copiers, clocks, vending machines, coffee makers, and kitchenette equipment.
Generally, it is best to specify the original purpose of the building as the building type, and then modify the use-area type to reflect its current use. Select building type = "Education", use-area type = "Office." The building's construction characteristics are inferred based on building type, while usage parameters (including occupancy, lighting and equipment use, and hot water demand) are based on the use-area type.
FEDS was originally designed to model buildings with single, homogeneous heating and cooling technologies within each individual building. The portion of building set served inputs are available to specify whole buildings within a building set that are served by a given technology. If your building has more than one type of heating or cooling technology, there are a couple of options. If the majority of service is provided by one system, users might simply model that one as if it were the only system serving the building. If the occupants use portable space heaters, users could account for the energy consumed and heating service provided by representing them as a miscellaneous equipment record. If, on the other hand, one system does not dominate, it would be best to model the building as a pair of linked buildings, with one technology serving each portion. Or, if a major renovation is being contemplated, users might wish to model the building once as if it were served by one technology, and once by the other. Optimizing each case separately, the results will provide insights into which system type would be best for the building.
An option is also available that makes it possible to model multiple heating or cooling technologies serving the same building(s). To enable this feature, select the percentage of each building served option from the heating or cooling end use inputs. When this option is specified, FEDS will model the defined HVAC technologies as serving the specified portion served of each building in the building set.
There is effectively no limit to the number of building sets allowed in a single case if there is enough hard drive space. Currently, each building set occupies approximately 4.3 megabytes of space across all file types. Given adequate storage space, FEDS can be—and has been—used to model an entire community, city, or utility service area.
There is no real limit to the number of buildings that can be modeled in a building set. However, building sets are designed to model buildings that share similar characteristics. The more similar buildings are within a given building set, the more accurate the results will be.
If the boiler serves only one building, select single building boiler as the equipment type and the fuel type that fires the boiler (natural gas, distillate oil, etc.). If the steam is piped in from a central boiler plant or purchased from offsite, select central steam as the fuel type and specify the equipment type as either a radiator, fan coil, or air handling unit using central steam or hot water (in-building equipment is a heat exchanger). For steam purchased from an off-site supplier, input a price for purchased central steam in the non-electric energy price inputs. For self-generated steam, create a central plant record, associated conversion equipment, and thermal loops within the central plant and thermal loops inputs.
Use the building type or use-area designation that best fits regardless of which list it is on. The building set classes were grouped this way to aid in the selection of common types, but either list may be selected.
The number of heat or cooling equipment should be specified. For boilers or chillers, enter the number of boilers or chillers and not the number of air handling units or fan coil units. Similarly, for furnaces, packaged cooling units, and heat pumps specify the number of those devices. If the building is served by a fuel generated at a central plant (not within the building), specify the number of heat exchangers that transfers heat from the central distribution loop to the building loop.
This is an error message that comes up when there are incompatible heating or cooling systems defined in a building set. This can occur when one building is modeled with linked heating (a heating system requiring a fan to deliver the heat; e.g., furnace, fan coil, or AHU) with one served by an unlinked heating system (no fan required ; e.g., radiator or baseboard system) together in the same building set. The situation can be remedied by separating the buildings into distinct building sets. For more information about allowable HVAC combinations, refer to Appendix I of the FEDS User's Guide.
FEDS allows a negative value for percentage of heat to the conditioned space. For example, if the equipment has a COP of 2.0 and operates with an exterior condenser, then -200 should be entered for this value and the capacity should be half the actual rated capacity. (This will result in heating an amount equivalent to 200% of the unit's consumption as being rejected outside.)
A dual-fuel heat pump is an electric air-source heat pump that uses another fuel source (natural gas, LPG, oil) for the auxiliary or backup heat (instead of electric resistance coils). It can be accomplished within a single integrated unit or pieced together by mating a standard air source heat pump with a furnace via a controller. The controller determines which unit to operate based on outside temperature, relative efficiencies, and cost of each fuel.
The heat/cool pair is a concept added to FEDS with the advent of considering heat pumps as replacements to conventional heating and cooling technologies. A heat/cool pair identifies to the model which heating and cooling technologies jointly serve a particular building or group of buildings in the building set and may be considered for joint replacement by a heat pump technology. In order to consider heat pumps or any other integrated heating and cooling technology as replacements for existing heating and cooling technologies, the heat/cool pairs must be defined. Baseline heat pump records are automatically paired (as long as their fuel type, equipment type, number of units, and vintages match) upon updating inferences, while all non-heat pump technologies must be paired manually.
A linked heating and cooling system is when the heating and/or cooling coil is integrated with the ventilation system, employing air as the distribution fluid (air handler, fan coil, packaged unit, furnace, etc.).
An unlinked heating and cooling system is when the ventilation system (if present) is separate from the heating coil, and heat is provided without requiring fan-powered air delivery. Unlinked heating technologies include radiators, baseboard electric, or infrared heaters.
Currently, FEDS assumes that all cooling is linked, with the exception of evaporative coolers, which are assigned a separate, special ventilation scenario. For more detailed information see Section 4.4.2 of the FEDS User's Guide.
The crossover temperature is the outdoor air temperature at which a dual-fuel heat pump switches operation from the heat pump to the backup technology. This is typically the control methodology for these systems and can be entered or determined by FEDS. FEDS will calculate the optimal crossover temperature based on electric and backup fuel prices, heat pump performance and capacity vs. temperature, and furnace efficiency.
A separate heat/cool pair is a pair of heating and cooling technologies that are completely separate units, yet serve the same area/building (e.g., a furnace and separate package unit, or a boiler and a chiller). An integrated heat/cool pair is one in which the heating and cooling sources are packaged together in the same unit (e.g., a packaged cooling unit with integral gas burner or 'gas-pack' system). Identifying a heat/cool pair as integrated tells FEDS that individual heating and cooling replacements cannot be considered as a direct replacement.
Similar to the separate vs. integrated discussion for heat/cool pairs, a separate backup source for a dual-fuel heat pump indicates there is a separate furnace that is connected to the heat pump via a controller. A dual-fuel heat pump with integrated backup is a heat pump unit with a built-in gas or LPG auxiliary heat source. For modeling purposes, the only real difference is that FEDS will consider replacing the individual components (heat pump or backup furnace) of a separate dual-fuel heat pump in addition to replacing the entire system.
Thermostat dead band for heating represents the range of temperatures below the set point at which the thermostat does not call for heat. For example, at a 70-degree set point and a 2-degree dead band, the temperature will drop to 68 degrees before heating is activated, raising the temperature back to 70. It may also be referred to as the throttling range or differential. It operates similarly for cooling, allowing the temperature to rise a number of degrees equal to the dead band before cooling is activated.
The typical FEDS user will not have detailed information available regarding plug load levels in order to adequately model them and will need to rely on the inferred values. However, miscellaneous equipment records may be modified or added if a load is unusual or atypical of the use-area type, or has an extremely large load (or one that sees extensive use) that is above and beyond what would be considered typical. Similarly, a user may want to reduce the capacity density for some areas deemed to have a lower load density than typical for that type of space, or even delete entire records when there is no equipment in use of a given type.