Free Heating for Precision Temperature and RH Control

  • By Eden Engineering
  • March 13, 2026

Free Heating for Precision Temperature and RH Control

Using Condenser Water Directly via Heat Exchanger Instead of Heat Pump or HRU

Precision temperature and relative humidity (RH) control are essential in modern facilities such as pharmaceutical laboratories, semiconductor cleanrooms, healthcare environments, and research facilities. These environments typically require tight control of supply air dew point to maintain indoor RH stability, often achieved by deep cooling followed by reheating.

Traditionally, reheating is accomplished using electric heaters, hot water boilers, or heat pump–based heat recovery units (HRUs). While effective, these methods introduce additional energy consumption. However, in facilities equipped with central chilled water plants, there exists a significant and often underutilized source of thermal energy: the condenser water loop.

The Conventional Approach: Active Heating Requires Additional Energy

In a typical chilled water system, air handling units (AHUs) dehumidify air by cooling it below its dew point using chilled water coils. This overcooling is necessary to remove moisture but results in supply air that is too cold for direct delivery into the space. Therefore, reheating is required to bring the air to the desired supply temperature while maintaining low moisture content.

Common reheating methods include:

All of these systems consume additional electrical or fuel energy to generate heat. Even heat pump-based HRUs, while efficient, still require compressor energy to elevate the temperature of the heat source.

The Untapped Opportunity: Condenser Water as a Passive Heat Source

In any water-cooled chiller plant, condenser water continuously carries rejected heat from the chillers to the cooling towers. This condenser water typically operates at temperatures such as:

This heat is normally rejected to atmosphere via cooling towers and effectively wasted. However, this condenser water represents a stable, continuous, and completely free heat source.

By installing a heat exchanger between the condenser water loop and a secondary hot water loop, this heat can be directly transferred to serve air-side reheating applications.

Importantly, this method requires no compressor and no additional thermal energy input.

Application in Precision RH Control Systems

In precision environments, reheating requirements are typically moderate in temperature but continuous in operation. For example:

This temperature increase can be readily achieved using hot water in the range of 30-40 °C. Condenser water operating at 33-36 °C is ideal for this purpose.

Through a properly designed heat exchanger, the secondary hot water loop can achieve temperatures sufficient for reheating without any active heating device.

This creates a fully passive heat recovery system.

Energy Impact and System-Level Benefits

The benefits of using condenser water directly for reheating include:

01

Zero Compressor Energy Consumption

Unlike heat pumps or HRUs, passive heat exchangers do not require compressors. The only energy involved is minimal pumping power, which is negligible compared to compressor energy.
02

Reduced Cooling Tower Energy Consumption

By extracting heat from condenser water before it reaches the cooling tower, the cooling load on the tower is reduced. This results in lower cooling tower fan energy consumption.
03

Improved Overall Plant Efficiency

This approach effectively converts rejected waste heat into useful heating energy, improving overall thermodynamic efficiency of the chilled water plant.
04

Lower Capital and Maintenance Costs

Passive heat exchangers are simpler, more reliable, and require less maintenance compared to heat pumps or HRUs, which involve compressors, refrigerant circuits, and associated components.

Comparison with Heat Pump-Based Heat Recovery

Aspect Passive Condenser Water HEX Heat Pump / HRU
Compressor required No Yes
Additional electrical input Negligible Yes
Heating temperature capability Moderate (around 34 °C) High (up to 60 °C+)
Maintenance complexity Low Higher
Overall system efficiency Excellent Moderate to Good
Best application Air-side reheat High-temperature heating or domestic hot water

Passive condenser water recovery is particularly suitable for reheating applications where moderate temperatures are sufficient.

Design Considerations

To implement this system successfully, several key design considerations should be addressed:

When properly designed, the system operates seamlessly alongside the chiller plant.

Realizing Truly “Free Heating”

In facilities where chilled water systems operate continuously, condenser water heat recovery represents one of the most effective opportunities for energy optimization.

By using a passive heat exchanger, reheating energy can be obtained without compressors, without additional electrical consumption, and without additional heat generation systems.

This transform rejected heat from a waste product into a valuable energy resource.

Conclusion

Passive heat recovery from condenser water offers a simple, reliable, and highly efficient method for reheating in precision temperature and humidity control applications.

By directly utilizing condenser water through a heat exchanger, facilities can eliminate or significantly reduce the need for active heating systems such as heat pumps or HRUs.

This approach improves overall plant efficiency, reduces operating costs, lowers maintenance requirements, and contributes to sustainable building operation.

In precision environmental control, sometimes the most efficient heating system is not one that generates heat – but one that simply recovers heat that already exists.