Heat Pumps are devices which use small quantities of energy
in order to move heat from one place to another. Usually they are used to pull
heat from the air or the ground in order to warm a building. They can also be
reversed in order to cool a building. They work much the same way as air conditioners
do, except that they can do the work of both an air conditioner and a furnace.
Therefore, when using heat pumps it is not necessary to install both heating
and cooling systems - a single system performs both jobs. They are also more
efficient than furnaces because they merely transfer heat rather than burn
fuels to make it; but as a result, they work better in moderate rather than
extreme climates. For people in moderate climates like Arizona, using heat
pumps Arizona rather than furnaces and air conditioners can save considerable
money on utility bills.
There are different types of heat pumps, but all of them
operate on the principle of heat transfer, which means moving heat from one
location to another rather than burning fuel to create it. Because of the
second law of thermodynamics, heat naturally tends to flow from a place with a
high temperature to one with a lower temperature. They use small amounts of
energy to reverse that process, pulling heat from low temperature areas and
moving it to high temperature areas - from a heat source such as the ground or
air to a heat sink such as a building. A common type of heat pump is an air
source one, which removes heat from air outside a building and pumps it through
coils filled with refrigerant to the inside.
Air source heat pumps AZ consist of two fans, the
refrigerator coils, a compressor and a reversing valve. One fan is used to
bring outside air over the refrigerator coils, which transfer the heat inside
where it is blown from the coils by a second fan and distributed through the
building. The purpose of the reversing valve is to reverse the flow of
refrigerant so the system operates backwards. Instead of pumping the heat
inside the building, it releases the heat, like an air conditioner does. Then the
refrigerant absorbs the heat inside the pump and carries it outside where it is
released. Then the refrigerant cools down and flows back inside to take more
heat.
Ground source heat
pumps work the same way as air source ones except they absorb the heat from
the ground, or from a body of water under the ground, and then transfer the
heat indoors or vice versa when working in reverse mode. An absorption heat
pump AZ is an air source unit which is powered by solar energy, propane,
natural gas, or geothermically heated water instead of by electricity. The
chief difference between air source models and absorption pumps is that instead
of compressing the refrigerant, absorption ones absorb ammonia into water then
a low power pump pressurizes it. The heat source boils the ammonia from the
water and the process begins anew.
Heat pumps AZ work by heat transfer rather than by burning
fuels. A heat pump AZ works along the same lines as an air conditioner. For
moderate climates such as Arizona, heat pumps Arizona can be the cheapest
heating and cooling option. Contact AC by Jay for all your heating and cooling
needs.
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