Just as the summer is heating up, Florida Atlantic University’s
Institute for Sensing and Embedded Network Systems Engineering (I-SENSE)
and Dioxide Materials™ have formed a unique partnership to develop and
evaluate a novel low-cost, low-power, wireless CO2 sensing system for
heating, ventilation and air-conditioning (HVAC) applications. The
technology that emerges from this joint project will help to
significantly lower the amount of energy businesses and homes use for
HVAC.
Located in the Research Park at FAU, Dioxide Materials™, in
collaboration with FAU’s I-SENSE, has received a Small Business
Technology Transfer (STTR) grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to
work on the project. This project builds on a private/public partnership
that leverages the complementary skill sets and associated innovations
of both organizations.
Dioxide Materials™ has developed low-cost, low-power CO2 sensors for
building HVAC applications. Their technology employs electrochemical
sensors, similar to those in a household carbon monoxide (CO) alarm,
making the sensor sensitive to carbon dioxide rather than carbon
monoxide. The sensors can be manufactured much less expensively than the
current generation of CO2 sensors and can run on batteries.
Currently, Dioxide Materials™ has working sensors, but needs the
electronics and communications systems to connect the sensors to a
building’s direct digital control (DDC) systems. I-SENSE is a leader in
the design and application of low-cost, low-power telemetry platforms
and sensor network systems. Together, the team will develop the
electronics and software necessary to interface Dioxide Materials’
sensors to a building’s DDC system. This new technology will help to
lower the amount of energy homes and businesses use for HVAC based on
whole-building CO2 monitoring without the need for expensive building
rewiring.
Most current HVAC systems are designed to supply constant ventilation
based on the design occupancy of the space. However, this method often
results in significant wastes of energy and energy dollars. Demand
control ventilation (DCV), the automated process that adjusts the volume
of fresh air or outside air into a building, saves energy and
electricity costs by using CO2 sensors to measure the air quality and
occupancy in each room, and adjusting the HVAC system accordingly.
Although DCV is often seen in the construction of new multisensory LEED
buildings, it has been slow to be adopted in commercial retrofits or
remodeling projects, small commercial buildings and residential
complexes.
“Our project will focus on robust, networked CO2 sensing and HVAC system
integration; we are excited to partner with Dioxide Materials™ to help
them develop and test these innovative CO2 sensors,” said Jason
Hallstrom, Ph.D., director of FAU’s I-SENSE and a professor in the
College of Engineering and Computer Science at FAU. “We expect this
technology to substantially reduce the costs that are associated with
installing DCV systems in commercial and residential buildings.”
According to the U.S. Department of Energy, demand control ventilation
using CO2 sensors could reduce the energy costs of heating and cooling a
building by 10 to 30 percent.
“By leveraging our expertise with FAU’s I-SENSE scientists and
engineers, we can have a tremendous impact on reducing energy waste in
buildings,” said Rich Masel, Ph.D., founder and CEO of Dioxide
Materials™. “Having CO2 sensors in each room so that cooling and heating
are based on the number of people in the room rather than running at a
constant temperature, will prevent energy losses from over ventilation,
while maintaining indoor air quality.”
FAU’s I-SENSE is a leader in the design and application of low-cost,
low-power telemetry platforms and sensor network systems. I-SENSE serves
as a clearinghouse for sensing, communication, and data management
technologies, providing expertise, engineering support, and project
management services through its research, engineering and administrative
cores.
Dioxide Materials™ is developing a new generation of low-cost,
low-powered CO2 electrochemical sensors for demand controlled
ventilation (DCV) of HVAC systems. The devices are microscale versions
of the CO2 electrolyzers being developed for CO2 conversion and use the
company’s patent pending CO2 conversion catalysts to create an
electrical signal that is proportional to the amount of CO2 in the air.
Dioxide Materials' low-power CO2 sensors meet the battery operating
lifetime requirement, eliminating the need for costly rewiring, and,
unlike infrared-based sensors, are compatible with wireless thermostats.
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