Swimming pool heater and attic chiller
An forced-air to liquid heat exchanger is used in or adjacent to the attic space of an unmodified residential or commercial building to transfer the latent solar gained heat to a swimming pool, while cooling the attic space and thereby lowering the energy cost of cooling the living space of the said building. The roof material serves as a solar collector, while the attic space provides a temporary storage medium. The present invention allows the transfer of this solar energy to a swimming pool in a very low cost method. The present invention can lower the building summer cooling utility costs by cooling the attic space of the building, while very inexpensively raising the swimming pool temperature and extending the usability season of the swimming pool.
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a swimming pool heating system, and in particular to an expandable, modular, swimming pool heating system for installation in or adjacent to the attic of a house or similar structure.
2. Discussion of the Prior Art
In many climates, it is usually necessary to heat the water in swimming pools to allow for comfortable experience or extend the usable season. Ambient air temperatures during the day can be comfortable, but night temperatures often allow a pool to cool well below the comfort level. Thus, it is often necessary to heat the pool and raise the water temperature to a comfortable level.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,014,770, issued to E. G. Palmer on May 14, 1991 discloses a system including a heat exchanger mounted in the attic of a house. Swimming pool water is circulated from the pool through the heat exchanger where it is heated, and then returned to the pool. In the Palmer system, the heat exchanger is mounted in a casing, which includes an air inlet and an air outlet in close proximity to each other. Cool air discharged through the outlet is re-circulated to the inlet which reduces the efficiency of the unit. As a result, much of the hot air stored in attic is not recovered by the Palmer unit. Additionally, the Palmer unit is a somewhat large assembly, which is too large to pass through the standard opening into most attics without modification to the opening.
U.S. Pat No. 6,962,150, issues to Davis Allen Booth on Nov. 25, 2003 discloses a heat exchanger unit mounted in the attic of a house. This system differs from the Palmer system in that the dimensions are slightly smaller and it includes two relatively small flexible ducts routed to remote areas of the attic to prevent rapid recirculation of the same air.
GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTIONThe objective of the present invention greatly improve the heat transfer capability, simplify installation, and improve system leak safety by improved ducting, unit placement flexibility, fan placement, and provide a simplified method for transfer heat to the swimming pool water by providing a simple, modular system for mounting in or near the attic and effectively use the large amount of the heat available in the attic.
The invention relates to a modular swimming pool water heating system comprising an air to water heat exchange unit with an inlet manifold introducing filtered pool water and an outlet for returning the warmed water to swimming pool; Heat exchanger is mounted in or near the attic space; coupled to the heat exchanger on the upwind side is a fan shroud and attached high temp fan and motor; upwind of the said fan and motor is a flexible duct routed to or near the peak of the attic as to draw the hottest air available in the said attic; heat exchanger is mounted over safety drip pan draining to exterior of building.
The invention is described below in greater detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
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A drain tube 20 is connected to a safety drain pan 21 placed below the heat transfer unit 13. The drain tube 20 extends from the safety drain pan 21 out of the structure where the heat transfer unit 13 is mounted to the outdoors for draining water in the event of a leak on the heat transfer coils 10 or the pipes immediately adjacent to the heat transfer unit 13.
Air enters the heat transfer unit 13 via the flexible duct 17, then via the fan assembly 14, than via the plenum 15. Air enters the heat transfer coils 10 and is discharged opposite the plenum 15 into the attic space or area unit is otherwise mounted. The fan assembly 14 (FIGS. 2,3,5 and 6) includes a cylindrical casing with pre drilled holes at the outflow end for attaching to the fan assembly mounting flange 18 incorporated in the plenum 15. Bolts and nuts are used to connect the fan assembly mounting flange 18 to the fan assembly 14. An electric motor 22 (
Referring to FIGS. 1,4,5, and 6, the heat transfer unit 13 includes forced air fan assembly 14, the plenum 15 with fan assembly mounting flange 18 and heat transfer coil seal 19, and the heat transfer coil 10. Water flowing through the pipe 9 (
The heat transfer coil 10 and plenum 15 are designed to fit through attic openings having conventional dimensions. The heat transfer coil 10 and plenum 15 can be placed in an attic separately and assembled in the attic or adjacent space otherwise mounted and then attached to the flexible duct 17 also introduced and mounted separately in the attic.
In a typical system, the heat transfer coil is 28″ long by 20″ high by 3″ deep which allows access to most attic hatch openings. The plenum 15 is 28″ long by 20″ high by 14″ deep. The Fan assembly 14 is 16″ diameter by 12″ long. Duct 17 is secured to the fan assembly 14 using nylon draw tight connectors. The duct 17 is stretched out and positioned as near as possible to the attic peak as to draw the hottest air possible into the heat transfer unit 13 via the fan assembly 14. The heat transfer coil 10 is a custom designed copper tube and fin assembly with dimensions described above.
REFERENCES CITED
Claims
1. A modular swimming pool water heating system comprising a fan shroud and drip pan for mounting in or near the attic of a building; a heat exchange unit mounted to said fan shroud and used for introducing swimming pool water into said heat exchange unit; a ducted fan unit for mounting on fan shroud for pushing air into said fan shroud and through said heat exchange unit; flexible duct for connection to said inlet of said ducted fan for receiving warm attic air from the peak and hottest locations of the attic and feeding said air to said fan shroud and heat exchanger for transfer to the pool water circulating through the heat exchanger, thus transferring the attic heat to the connected swimming pool.
2. The system of claim 1 is easily adaptable to commercially available solar heater controllers, of which are not covered or discussed further in this claim.
Type: Application
Filed: Feb 5, 2009
Publication Date: Aug 5, 2010
Inventor: Theodore Mark Wagner (Abilene, TX)
Application Number: 12/366,473
International Classification: F25B 29/00 (20060101);