Work continues on the Knox, Maine, Passive House under
construction by Chris Corson and
EcoCor Design & Build. Last week,
the crew started installing the high-tech energy recovery
ventilator (ERV) that will supply the home with fresh air at a rate
of one-third of an air change per hour — while recovering 92
percent of the heat from the outgoing air in wintertime, and
maintaining a comfortable and healthy level of indoor humidity. (In
summer, the unit can operate in bypass mode, which draws in fresh
air while rejecting outdoor heat and humidity.)
“I’m a proponent of energy recovery ventilators, not
just heat recovery ventilators,” says Corson. “You get
the best of both worlds. You get the capacity to control the latent
load, to use the latent load of the house for heat exchange —
you can convert that moisture into heat energy with the incoming
air. It allows me to regulate humidity both in the peak seasons and
in the shoulder seasons pretty effectively.”
Corson considered several different brands of ERV before
settling on his choice, a
ComfoAir
200 manufactured by Zehnder. Corson says, “
Stirling Technologies was on the
short list because it’s an American-made product that’s
relatively inexpensive, and it is passive house suitable and has
been used in passive houses. But it would not have been my first
choice. I also looked at
Venmar
units, which are manufactured in Canada — they were never
really on my short list but they were always in the mix for
comparing and contrasting options based on cost efficacy and so
on.” Corson also looked at Paul systems (pronounced
“pow-ool”), another Zehnder brand: “The Paul had
the highest efficiency rating, but it was also more
expensive.” The ComfoAir 200, however, has a rated efficiency
very close to the Paul’s, but with an easier price tag to
swallow. “Zehnder’s ComfoAir 350 was my first choice
when I started this project,” says Corson, “but then
the ComfoAir 200 came into the U.S. market, and it immediately went
to the top of my list.”
Coastal Connection spoke with Barry Stephens, the
national sales and marketing manager for Zehnder America, about
Corson’s project and the comparison between the ComfoAir 350
and the ComfoAir 200. The 350 is rated at 84 percent efficient,
Stephens says; the 200 is rated at 92 percent efficient (as defined
by Passive House using a formula that measures heat loss to the
outdoors as well as the electricity use of the systems). In
practice, Stephens says, either unit will use about 20 or 30 Watts
while running. On a freezing day outside, the units will take
70°F air from the kitchen and bath and exhaust it to the
outdoors at about 35°F; incoming fresh air will rise to
67°F or 68°F before it’s delivered through 3-inch
tubing to bedrooms or living rooms.
The difference between 84 percent and 92 precent efficiency may
have only modest effects on the comfort of house occupants; either
way, they’re getting a steady flow of fresh outdoor air
that’s barely cooler than room temperature. But as Stephens
points out, marginal energy savings can have significant
bottom-line effects when a builder’s working to the very
strict Passive House standard. “Over the course of a year,
that small improvement might allow the builder to use a few inches
less insulation in his exterior shell, or purchase less expensive
windows, and still keep the annual energy consumption low enough to
pass the standard,” he says. “So in this very
challenging application, those efficiencies can pay for the extra
cost of the unit.”
One benefit of Corson’s Passive House’s very low
heating load is the simplicity and safety of the mechanical
systems. On site, Corson assembled the ComfoAir unit himself,
placing registers and running air tubing with the help of carpenter
Rich Perry (see pictures). The open-web floor trusses made running
the 3-inch air lines simpler, but in the tight mechanical space
under the staircase, lining up the intake and exhaust vents, the
manifold, and the supply and return lines took a little figuring
out. “Next time it’ll go quicker,” said
Corson.