As record-breaking heat waves cripple the West, air conditioning units and swamp coolers have malfunctioned or stopped working in at least three Nevada state corrections facilities. “We haven’t had air conditioning for at least 45 days,” Leslie Meier, who is incarcerated at Jean Conservation Camp, located about 20 miles outside Las Vegas, told the Current. […]
Vance said there were various factors contributing to why the swamp coolers in two units at High Desert State Prison were no longer working – “hard water becoming corrosive, temperatures reaching so high the coolers are insufficient to combat the heat, and humidity reducing the effectiveness of the coolers.”
Evaporative coolers are more energy-efficient than air conditioners. However, they can only cool so far, because they rely on increasing humidity in air to reduce temperature. You can’t exceed 100%.
However, there are two ways an evaporative cooler can mitigate this.
The first is to use indirect cooling, and multiple stages.
The simplest form of evaporative cooling is to use direct cooling. This is basically a fan blowing across a wet filter, with the cooled air blowing at whoever you want to cool. That’s a single-stage evaporative cooler, a “direct” evaporative cooler. The downside is that this directly increases the humidity of the air that the person being cooled experiences. A more-sophisticated approach is to have two separate loops. You blow air past a filter, which cools it…but instead of blowing it at the person, you blow it into a heat exchanger – a countercurrent exchanger has theoretically 100% efficiency – and then back out to the outside. That cools the air in the other side of the heat exchanger without increasing its humidity. You can then run that dry, cool air through another stage of an evaporative cooler to reduce the temperature further. That’s an indirect evaporative cooler with two stages. In theory, you could have even more stages. Each individual stage’s cooling is limited by the difference between the current humidity and 100% humidity, but the system as a whole can exceed that.
The second is to use hybrid air-conditioning/evaporative cooler units. There, you use air conditioning…but the air blowing past the “hot” side’s radiator is cooled by an evaporative cooler, so you’re getting some of the energy efficiency benefits of evaporative cooling while still maintaining the ability to cool further than an evaporative cooler would.
I started to become increasingly-interested in evaporative coolers because I was totally oblivious to them as a kid – never seen them used, just air conditioners – but was impressed by their efficiency when I finally did run into them. I suspect that considerable portions of the US could probably dramatically reduce energy usage if affordable, reasonably-sophisticated evaporative coolers were used.
I am suspicious that part of the reason that they aren’t used more is because they’re easy to misuse – like, if not maintained, you can get algae growing in the things, and then they, well, smell like a swamp. But it shouldn’t cost much more to make one for continuous-flow systems that has a tank of concentrated algaecide and just slowly dispenses it.
I see lots of direct-cooling evaporative cooling systems for homes:
But the fancier ones – hybrid, multi-stage – seem to only target larger, commercial installations, which kind of bums me out.
Another benefit – even if the energy efficiency alone doesn’t interest one – is that higher energy efficiency means that it becomes more-affordable to have higher air turnover with the outside, which means lower carbon dioxide levels indoors. One interesting finding that I don’t think gets enough attention is that we used to think that elevated carbon dioxide levels only have much of an impact when they get very high, quite some thousands of ppm. However, I’ve read some newer studies that show measurable cognitive decreases at considerably lower levels, like 1000 ppm. When you consider that carbon dioxide used to be ~280ppm pre-industrial era, is now over 420 ppm outdoors and rising at over 2 ppm per year, and that indoor air concentration is higher than outdoor air concentrations, not to mention in cities, the direct effects of higher carbon dioxide levels on humans start to become more interesting. As far as I’m aware, we have no existing carbon dioxide reduction process for buildings that’s more economical than just venting air to the outside. Modern buildings, which are better-sealed than older buildings, might come with the disadvantage of higher indoors carbon dioxide levels…so being able to cool efficiently so that higher turnover is practical is desirable.
Excellent write up and information, thanks! I too was oblivious to evaporative coolers when I was younger (grew up in a place with high humidity) and encountered them as an adult after moving to a drier place. They are surprisingly effective when maintained and conditions are right. I love the thought of using one to cool the AC radiator to increase capacity for cooling.
Evaporative coolers are more energy-efficient than air conditioners. However, they can only cool so far, because they rely on increasing humidity in air to reduce temperature. You can’t exceed 100%.
However, there are two ways an evaporative cooler can mitigate this.
The first is to use indirect cooling, and multiple stages.
The simplest form of evaporative cooling is to use direct cooling. This is basically a fan blowing across a wet filter, with the cooled air blowing at whoever you want to cool. That’s a single-stage evaporative cooler, a “direct” evaporative cooler. The downside is that this directly increases the humidity of the air that the person being cooled experiences. A more-sophisticated approach is to have two separate loops. You blow air past a filter, which cools it…but instead of blowing it at the person, you blow it into a heat exchanger – a countercurrent exchanger has theoretically 100% efficiency – and then back out to the outside. That cools the air in the other side of the heat exchanger without increasing its humidity. You can then run that dry, cool air through another stage of an evaporative cooler to reduce the temperature further. That’s an indirect evaporative cooler with two stages. In theory, you could have even more stages. Each individual stage’s cooling is limited by the difference between the current humidity and 100% humidity, but the system as a whole can exceed that.
The second is to use hybrid air-conditioning/evaporative cooler units. There, you use air conditioning…but the air blowing past the “hot” side’s radiator is cooled by an evaporative cooler, so you’re getting some of the energy efficiency benefits of evaporative cooling while still maintaining the ability to cool further than an evaporative cooler would.
I started to become increasingly-interested in evaporative coolers because I was totally oblivious to them as a kid – never seen them used, just air conditioners – but was impressed by their efficiency when I finally did run into them. I suspect that considerable portions of the US could probably dramatically reduce energy usage if affordable, reasonably-sophisticated evaporative coolers were used.
I am suspicious that part of the reason that they aren’t used more is because they’re easy to misuse – like, if not maintained, you can get algae growing in the things, and then they, well, smell like a swamp. But it shouldn’t cost much more to make one for continuous-flow systems that has a tank of concentrated algaecide and just slowly dispenses it.
I see lots of direct-cooling evaporative cooling systems for homes:
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=evaporative+cooler
But the fancier ones – hybrid, multi-stage – seem to only target larger, commercial installations, which kind of bums me out.
Another benefit – even if the energy efficiency alone doesn’t interest one – is that higher energy efficiency means that it becomes more-affordable to have higher air turnover with the outside, which means lower carbon dioxide levels indoors. One interesting finding that I don’t think gets enough attention is that we used to think that elevated carbon dioxide levels only have much of an impact when they get very high, quite some thousands of ppm. However, I’ve read some newer studies that show measurable cognitive decreases at considerably lower levels, like 1000 ppm. When you consider that carbon dioxide used to be ~280ppm pre-industrial era, is now over 420 ppm outdoors and rising at over 2 ppm per year, and that indoor air concentration is higher than outdoor air concentrations, not to mention in cities, the direct effects of higher carbon dioxide levels on humans start to become more interesting. As far as I’m aware, we have no existing carbon dioxide reduction process for buildings that’s more economical than just venting air to the outside. Modern buildings, which are better-sealed than older buildings, might come with the disadvantage of higher indoors carbon dioxide levels…so being able to cool efficiently so that higher turnover is practical is desirable.
Excellent write up and information, thanks! I too was oblivious to evaporative coolers when I was younger (grew up in a place with high humidity) and encountered them as an adult after moving to a drier place. They are surprisingly effective when maintained and conditions are right. I love the thought of using one to cool the AC radiator to increase capacity for cooling.