Alex Ferguson

84 Followers
69 Following
32 Posts
I study energy use, electrical demand and carbon emissions in buildings. I have a background in modelling and simulation, from FORTRAN to Python. Occasional stories about my family, my dogs and my boat. Views are personal. He / Him

A couple of weeks ago I was privileged to give a talk on #HeatPumps to the National Farmer's Union. My co-presenter, Glenn Wright, also shared some fantastic firsthand experiences about putting a heat pump in his own house.

Glenn's anecdote about Harold Orr visiting his reno project was my favourite part.

https://youtu.be/EPd3kZw7-iw?list=PLtRSlGyHZLGi0D_YWd1RDtKcbMTVuUcAg

Farm Building Energy Efficiency: Retrofits and Heat Pumps

YouTube

“Hydrogen should be used judiciously, to address emissions that can’t be eliminated in other ways.”

But: “Many of the uses being touted do not tick that box.”

Excellent editorial in @[email protected]

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-03693-6

Overhyping hydrogen as a fuel risks endangering net-zero goals

Hydrogen is touted as a wonder fuel for everything from transport to home heating — but greener and more efficient options are often available.

Hydrogen House Deploys Solar-Activated Rooftop Panels

Researchers in Belgium are preparing to market rooftop solar-activated panels that produce hydrogen gas instead of electricity.

CleanTechnica
(2/2) Also happy to share this super satisfying video of glass being cut

(1/2) Visited Nordik Windows in Vars ON today. Learned about innovations in cellular PVC frames and automated construction.

One key insight for me: window manufacturers feel triple-glazed units are too heavy. Good installers are already hard to find, and will become even harder to retain if windows continue to get heavier.

#windows #laborshortage

Energy efficiency has never been more cost effective.

Upgrading our leaky housing stock must be a priority to fight high energy bills.

Great piece in @[email protected] today covering my research @[email protected]

@[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected]

https://ig.ft.com/uk-energy-efficiency-gap/

How much money could you save by making your house more energy efficient?

Exclusive research shows upgrades to leaky properties in England and Wales would slash bills

Even so, Michael Lucking managed to solve a problem that DWHR developers still struggle with today - how to recover shower wastewater heat when the shower and water heater are on the same floor.

[Efficient drain water heat recovery in horizontal domestic shower drains](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0378778812006755)

(6/6)

Of course, all the magic happened below the drain pan. Drain water would flow through a serpentine labyrinth, preheating incoming cold water that flowed in the opposite direction.

No word on efficiency or pressure loss. But anybody who has ever fished hair out of their bathtub drain should spot the obvious flaw in this approach.

(5/6)

Few people know about Lucking’s concept, and even fewer have ever set eyes on his prototype. But here it is - largely indistinguishable from any other corner shower unit you can buy at your local home improvement store.

(4/6)

But in 1994, Michael Lucking of Heat Exchanges in Newfoundland dared to be different. He envisioned DWHR-equipped showers as an integrated product. As far as I know, the only reference to his ideas appeared in the May 1994 issue of Popular Science, which also included this fanciful illustration. Lucking’s concept located the heat recovery apparatus in the shower floor — thereby scavenging heat before it left the bathroom.

(3/6)