ASHRAE funds 14 student developed energy- and water-saving projects

May 26, 2010
Undergraduate HVAC&R students in their senior year are able to gain hands-on experience in their field thanks to the 2010-2011 ASHRAE Undergraduate Senior Project Grant.

ATLANTA — From smart home controls to solar powered gas refrigeration, undergraduate HVAC&R students in their senior year are able to gain hands-on experience in their field thanks to the 2010-2011 ASHRAE Undergraduate Senior Project Grant.

The grants, totaling some $65,000, are awarded by ASHRAE to colleges and universities worldwide to promote the study and teaching of HVAC&R, encouraging undergraduate students to pursue related careers. The grants are used to design and construct projects. For more information, visit ASHRAE.org/studentzone.

This year, 14 schools from across the country and around the world were awarded grants, with Purdue University-West Lafayette ranking the highest among the applicants for their proposal to develop smart home controls. As the top grant award winner, two students from the university are invited to present their project as part of the Student Program at the 2011 ASHRAE Winter Conference in Las Vegas, Nev.

“Purdue University is designing and building a net zero energy home that will showcase a variety of new technologies for residential construction” Bill Hutzel, faculty advisor of the project, said.

The ASHRAE grant will provide the crucial infrastructure for monitoring and controlling the mechanical, electrical, lighting and other systems in the smart house by developing the controls schematic; developing the sequence of operation; developing the control code; installing the controls and sensors; and commissioning the building systems.

The smart house will become a multidisciplinary living laboratory for large numbers of university students interested in low energy residential construction. The school also anticipates displaying the home to media, contractors and the public and predicts that at least 500 Purdue students will visit the home annually over a two-year period.

“This will be a fun and exciting project and great way to get students interested in HVAC&R careers,” Hutzel said.

Other ASHRAE grant recipients are:

•Purdue University–Calumet, Energy Efficient HVAC&R Using Evaporative Cooling

•California Maritime Academy, Solar Absorption Refrigeration Unit

•Texas A&M University, Thermal Energy Storage Using Phase Change Materials and Carbon Nanotubes

•Florida International University, Design and Testing of an Add on Rain Water External Radiant Wall Siding as both Thermal Mass and Heat Dissipater

•Penn State, Controlled Exposure Experimentation Reactors and Ambient Response Facility for Student Experiments/Demonstrations

•Widener University, Laboratory Ice Storage Cooling System for Air Conditioning Application

•Montana State University, Modulating Scroll Compressor Energy Efficiency Experiment

•UNC - Charlotte, group 2, Vapor Absorption Refrigeration Trainer

•University of Wyoming, Comprehensive Study to Evaluate HVAC Systems and Envelope Performances

•Hofstra University, Solar Powered Gas Refrigeration Experiment

•American University of Beirut, Study of Performance of a Solar Assisted Liquid Desiccant System To Supply Building Fresh Water and Cooling Needs by Modeling and Experimentation

•University of North Texas, Harvesting Built Environments for Global and Accessible Modular Energy Audit Training

•Oral Roberts University, Swirling Pipe Flow Laboratory

For more information on the grant program, visit www.ashrae.org/students. ASHRAE will begin accepting applications for the 2011-2012 program in August 2010, with a December 2010 final deadline.

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