A reduced-order model for predicting transient performance of air-source heat pumps
Shahzad Yousaf et al.
Abstract
This paper presents a transient, reduced-order model for variable-speed air-source heat pumps that captures start-up and cycling dynamics using only air-side inputs in heating operation. The model integrates two sub-models: a heating-capacity and a compressor power model identified via symbolic regression using high-fidelity simulations and experimental data. Validation was conducted on a 4-ton variable-speed heat pump tested in twin psychrometric chambers under diverse steady-state and dynamic start-up conditions. The models reproduce steady state operation with a mean absolute percentage error (MAPE) of 2.5% and 1.6% in heating capacity and power consumption, respectively. Dynamic error metrics remain below 4% for both the coefficient of variation of root mean square error (CVRMSE) and normalized mean bias error (NMBE) using only air-side temperatures, indoor fan supply, and compressor speed along with estimates of heat exchanger and zone air thermal mass. Sensitivity analyses confirm robustness to ± 20 % uncertainty in thermal mass assumptions. Unlike traditional approaches that rely on fixed degradation constants, the model explicitly differentiates between cold- and hot-start transients, enabling more accurate representation of start-up behavior. A representative cold-climate (Chicago, Illinois, USA) case study indicates that neglecting transient dynamics can bias seasonal performance and peak demand estimates by up to 4.9%. By enabling fast and accurate heat pump performance predictions, the model bridges the gap between high-fidelity physics-based simulations and the practical needs of building performance modeling while achieving simulation speeds over 10 6 times faster than real time. a) Physics-informed dynamic reduced-order heat pump model; b) Case study for a cold climate. • Dynamic, reduced order, model for variable speed heat pump using only air side inputs. • Differentiation between cold-start vs. hot-start transients overlooked by steady-state maps. • Robustness confirmed with ± 20% uncertainty in zone and HX mass yields less than 5% error. • Developed and validated a high fidelity heat pump model for training transient ROM. • Physics-informed steady-state compressor power model derived solely from air-side variables. • One-month Chicago TMY simulation shows that neglecting transients overestimates monthly COP by 4.9%.
3 citations
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Balanced mode · F 0.40 / M 0.15 / V 0.05 / R 0.40
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