Ice Bank Cooling A century ago when mechanical refrigeration was just coming into use, Ice Banks were a common way to cool large infrequently used areas. Large tanks of water were located in special ice bank rooms in basements and compressors worked 24/7 to remove heat from them and freeze them. Other lines of saline solution were chilled and fed into large radiators where air handlers moved large volumes of air through to cool the occupied areas. I was on the building committee of a large church in St. Louis for several years that was cooled by an ice bank. The compressor was surprisingly small but since most of the church was only used on Sunday and Wednesday evening the system was able to cool the large auditorium with no problems. The church had been built in the 1920’s and the ice bank system was still working normally in the 1990’s when I was there.
I want to implement ice bank cooling at my place in rural Texas south of Houston. I am completely off grid half a mile from the blacktop. I have solar and by 10:00 the battery banks are topped off. I have to use a small generator during the night since my battery banks won’t run the AC all night when it is hot.
Here are some thoughts on how it might be tested and implemented. Use a 250 gallon tote. Enclose it completely in a wooden frame with foam. Insert expansion tubing and tubing for water with anti-freeze to dump heat.
Assuming 200 gallons of water after tubing space, if the whole thing was frozen it would absorb 230,400 BTU before its temperature went up. Latent heat of fusion of water is 144 BTU per lb. At 8 pounds per gallon, 200 gallons is 1600 lbs. 1600x144=230,400.
If ten percent of the water can be frozen around the coils, 23,040 BTU could be absorbed. A 5000 BTU window unit cools my bedroom adequately. If I understand the concepts and numbers dumping heat to the ice in the tote would provide me with 4 plus hours of similar cooling. If 20% could be frozen it would handle an entire night. Water with antifreeze could be used with an automotive radiator and fan to cool the bedroom, dumping the heat to the tote.
If a DC motor could be used to drive the compressor, and if it could be fed directly from the solar panels when the battery bank was full, energy loss should be at the minimum. A microcomputer can monitor the input into the charge controller and the battery voltage and decide when to run the compressor.
Automotive AC compressors can be used to pressurize the freon. Golf cart motors and controllers could handle the control of the DC directly from the solar panels, driving the compressor via a V belt, or a controller could be made using a big mosfet and controlled by the microprocessor.
I am a retired microprocessor programmer so that part is not a problem and I have a machine shop. Is the whole idea practical? What are the problems? Has or is it being done?