Coefficient of performance
The coefficient of performance or COP of a heat pump, refrigerator or air conditioning system is a ratio of useful heating or cooling provided to work required. Higher COPs equate to higher efficiency, lower energy consumption and thus lower operating costs. The COP is used in thermodynamics.
The COP usually exceeds 1, especially in heat pumps, because instead of converting work to heat, they use work to move existing heat from one place to another. Less work is required to move heat than for conversion into heat, and because of this, heat pumps, air conditioners and refrigeration systems can have a coefficient of performance greater than one. Most air conditioners have a COP of 3.5 to 5.
While the Coefficient of Performance is a term commonly used with heat pumps, it is also applicable to any energy system that behaves in a thermodynamically open manner, receiving energy from the local environment, whether it be electromagnetic, electrostatic, or any other viable form. The key difference between the dimensionless term efficiency and CoP is that the denominator in the latter is the energy input provided by the user or operator only, to differentiate it from that supplied by the local environment.
As an example, if a heat pump has an internal compressor efficiency of 70% and the user supplies 1.2 kW of power to run the unit and 6.5 kW is drawn from the local thermal environment, then the efficiency-moderated output is 75% of a total of 7.7 kW = 5.8 kW. The CoP will therefore be 5.8/1.2 = 4.8.
The COP is highly dependent on operating conditions, especially absolute temperature and relative temperature between sink and system, and is often graphed or averaged against expected conditions.
Performance of absorption refrigerator chillers is typically much lower, as they are not heat pumps relying on compression, but instead rely on chemical reactions driven by heat.
Equation
The equation is:where
- is the useful heat supplied or removed by the considered system.
- is the net work put into the considered system in one cycle.
where
- is the heat flow from the cold reservoir to the system; since heat is being extracted from the cold reservoir, this value is positive.
- is the heat flow from the hot reservoir to the system; since heat is being sunk into the hot reservoir, this value is negative..
Theoretical performance limits
According to the first law of thermodynamics, after a full cycle of the process and thus.Since, we obtain
For a heat pump operating at maximum theoretical efficiency, it can be shown that
where and are the thermodynamic temperatures of the hot and cold heat reservoirs, respectively.
At maximum theoretical efficiency, therefore
which is equal to the reciprocal of the thermal efficiency of an ideal heat engine, because a heat pump is a heat engine operating in reverse.
Similarly, the COP of a refrigerator or air conditioner operating at maximum theoretical efficiency,
applies to heat pumps and applies to air conditioners and refrigerators.
Measured values for actual systems will always be significantly less than these theoretical maxima.
In Europe, the standard test conditions for ground source heat pump units use 308 K for and 273 K for. According to the above formula, the maximum theoretical COPs would be
Test results of the best systems are around 4.5. When measuring installed units over a whole season and accounting for the energy needed to pump water through the piping systems, seasonal COP's for heating are around 3.5 or less. This indicates room for further improvement.
The EU standard test conditions for an air source heat pump is at dry-bulb temperature of 20 °C for and 7 °C for. Given sub-zero European winter temperatures, real world heating performance is significantly poorer than such standard COP figures imply.
Improving the COP
As the formula shows, the COP of a heat pump system can be improved by reducing the temperature gap at which the system works. For a heating system this would mean two things:- Reducing the output temperature to around which requires piped floor, wall or ceiling heating, or oversized water to air heaters.
- Increasing the input temperature.
The COP of absorption chillers can be improved by adding a second or third stage. Double and triple effect chillers are significantly more efficient than single effect chillers, and can surpass a COP of 1. They require higher pressure and higher temperature steam, but this is still a relatively small 10 pounds of steam per hour per ton of cooling.