Chilled Water System Quick Facts
Total connected system capacity is 6,730 tons.
Total reliable capacity—or what’s expected to be provided at a time—is less than 4,707 tons.
Approximately 3 miles of underground insulated piping carries chilled water at 42F to 22 campus buildings—providing cooling for 1.8 million square feet (or about 28% of entire campus square footage).

 

Chillers

The mechanical system used to chill water for central cooling is comprised of three main parts. Chillers remove heat from the water. Cooling towers reject the waste heat to the outside air. And, pumps “push” the chilled water out to campus buildings through an underground network of pipes. 

The Plant currently operates two steam-driven chillers and two electric chillers.

The steam-driven chillers (both installed in 2007) each have an air-conditioning capacity of 1,365 tons of cooling.[One ton of cooling is equivalent to the amount of power required to melt one ton (2000 lbs) of ice (and thus produce one ton of chilled water) in a 24-hour period.]  These chillers are unique because they use steam energy (instead of electricity) to drive the turbine which cools the water. Because the steam boilers in the Central Plant need to be in standby mode—even in summer months—there is excess steam capacity available that the chillers can put to use.

The mechanical energy used to drive the refrigeration process in the chillers is produced using steam-driven turbines that are incorporated into each chiller. Steam, which is produced by the boilers in the Central Plant for the purpose of heating water used on campus, is channeled into a loop of steam-supply pipes in the chilling system. High-energy pressurized steam entering this loop from the boilers is “worked” as it rotates the blades of a turbine. The steam molecules collide with the surface of these blades and transfer their energy to spin the turbine. The exhaust, lower energy, lower pressurized steam is then passed through a steam condenser on top of the Chiller. This allows the steam to transfer away a little more energy so that it can condense to liquid form and re-enter the plant feed water supply system for the boilers. The spinning turbine on each chiller powers a compressor which drives the vapor compression cycle explained above.

In using steam instead of electricity for cooling, the steam-driven chillers avoid putting extra strain on the regional energy grid during peak electricity demand times in the hot summer months.

Each chiller has several components that allow it to do this job. These components work together to perform continuous rounds of a vapor-compression cycle, during which a chemical substance called a refrigerant is allowed to evaporate and condense so that it can take up and release energy from the water. Inside the chiller, pipes carry the water to be chilled through an evaporator where heat is transferred between the water and the refrigerant. This heat transfer process lowers the temperature of the water to about 42 degrees F, at which point it is cold enough to make the journey to the buildings. Aside from the evaporator, the other working components in each chiller include a refrigerant condenser, a compressor, a steam turbine, and a steam condenser. These components function to support the work of the evaporator, and interface with the other parts of the mechanical cooling system, like the cooling towers and pumps.

The electric chillers were installed later on: The first one in 2017 was part of the major Central Plant expansion project described in this journal article and the second one was installed in 2022. 

Cooling Towers

The mechanical energy used to drive the refrigeration process in the chillers is produced using steam-driven turbines that are incorporated into each chiller. Steam, which is produced by the boilers in the Central Plant for the purpose of heating water used on campus, is channeled into a loop of steam-supply pipes in the chilling system. High-energy pressurized steam entering this loop from the boilers is “worked” as it rotates the blades of a turbine. The steam molecules collide with the surface of these blades and transfer their energy to spin the turbine. The exhaust, lower energy, lower pressurized steam is then passed through a steam condenser on top of the Chiller. This allows the steam to transfer away a little more energy so that it can condense to liquid form and re-enter the plant feed water supply system for the boilers. The spinning turbine on each chiller powers a compressor which drives the vapor compression cycle explained above.

Piping and Distribution

Pumps "push" chilled water from the Plant into a vast network of underground piping out to many campus buildings. Chilled water piping is typically made from iron, steel or PVC material and pipes are wrapped and insulated for protection against corrosion and moisture from coming in contact with soil. As centrally-chilled water circulates around campus, its pressure and temperature change slightly due to elevation change, from branching off into campus buildings and absorbing the unwanted heat from those buildings. 

Centrally-chilled water enters a building through a valve and moves through chilled water supply piping within the building to a series of coils within box-shaped air handlers. The building’s ventilation system moves air across these coils to pick up “coolness” for the building interior. In exchange, the water flowing inside the coils removes unwanted “heat” from the air circulating over the coils. This (now slightly warmer) water leaves the building through return piping and joins up with the underground piping heading back to the main campus district energy plant. The water returning to the Plant passes through large outdoor cooling towers which reject this unwanted heat into the outside air.

A sophisticated system of automated controls and computers monitor and measure the temperature, pressure and flow-rate of chilled water as it enters and exits each building. Computer systems at the Plant are continuously calculating and adjusting the operation of the central chillers to optimize the entire system to run efficiently and keep campus buildings at a steady comfortable temperature for building occupants.