The easily adjustable technology made one hospital's access to hot water almost instant.
11/06/2015
In domestic hot water applications, users need instant hot water as soon as the tap is open. To provide that, separate circulation pipelines are required in the application. In traditionally made systems, a constant-speed pump is used to provide the needed pressure in the hot water and circulation pipeline. The pump typically runs at maximum speed and is usually throttled by a valve to the design flow. The right flow in the vertical riser pipes is commissioned by either static balancing valves or thermostatic valves.

An Intelligent Pump in DHW Applications
One new intelligent pump has introduced a constant temperature control mode. The constant temperature control mode maintains the temperature set on the pump by adapting the pump speed to the actual need. If the sensed temperature is increasing, the pump will ramp down and vice versa. The temperature signal is based on the pump's internal temperature sensor, or an external sensor can be connected directly to the pump.Constant Temperature Control Mode
The constant temperature control mode ensures that the pressure and flow in the system are what is needed to maintain the desired water temperature. Because the desired water temperature is always ensured and overflow should not occur, pump throttling valves are unnecessary and the building owner can expect both substantial pumping energy savings and capital cost reductions. Its built-in communication, and energy-metering and flow-limiting functionalities make it a money-saver in heating, cooling and district energy application.Handheld Control Device
The intelligent pump can be set up and accessed with the manufacturer's handheld device. With this device or app, control mode and setpoints can be selected or changed, for example.
Case Study
The new intelligent pumps were installed at a regional hospital in Denmark. In 2014, the hospital had a capacity of 500 beds, a floor area of 95,000 square meters, 2,900 employees and a water consumption of 58,000 cubic meters (m3). The old pumps at the hospital were constant-speed pumps, always operating at 100 percent and unable to adapt their performance to varying need since they were not supplied with frequency inverters. They were also undersized and not up to the job in terms of pressure. This meant the flow in the system was insufficient to maintain the needed temperatures.
