Title: | Heat pumps |
Authors: | Kvakovský, Milan Sklenárová, Vieroslava Medveď, Dušan |
Citation: | Proceedings of the Intensive Programme 2010. 1st ed. Pilsen: University of West Bohemia. Faculty of electrical engineering. Department of electrical power engineering and environmental engineering, 2010, s. 46-49. ISBN 978-80-261-0010-2. |
Issue Date: | 2010 |
Publisher: | University of West Bohemia. Faculty of electrical engineering. Department of electrical power engineering and environmental engineering |
Document type: | konferenční příspěvek conferenceObject |
URI: | http://home.zcu.cz/~tesarova/IP/Proceedings/Proc_2010/index.htm http://hdl.handle.net/11025/22544 |
ISBN: | 978-80-261-0010-2 |
Keywords: | tepelná čerpadla;ohřev teplé vody;obnovitelné zdroje energie;tepelná energie |
Keywords in different language: | heat pumps;hot water heating;heat energy;renewable energy sources |
Abstract in different language: | Problems of heat pumps are kept under constant review. All from us are aware that energy prices are growing from one year to another. In this context many of us have found themselves the challenge to growing production costs and hot water heating in the house, apartment or other object. Exist a number of solutions but they always depend of suitability of their use in what geographic area and climate zone we live. Experts around the world are for a long time dealing with the idea of alternative solutions to the rational reduction of heat energy. The costs of heating are 15,000 kWh of heat energy for classical house with an area of 200 m2 of heating space. The next part is the energy needed for cooking, lighting and it is around 3500 kWh. Based on these facts have been developed a number of interesting technologies, such as: solar collectors, low temperature condensing boilers, wood-gas stoves, fireplace heat exchangers etc. However, neither of these technologies used as much energy from renewable natural resources as a heat pump. Technology which receives heat (without combustion) of natural resources is called a heat pump. |
Rights: | © University of West Bohemia |
Appears in Collections: | Proceedings of the intensive programme 2010 Proceedings of the intensive programme 2010 |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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Kvakovsky.pdf | Plný text | 376,81 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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