Does turning off the air-conditioning when you’re not home actually save energy?

August 24, 2022

By Aisling Pigott, Jennifer Scheib, and Kyri Baker

Hot summer days can mean high electricity bills. People want to stay comfortable without wasting energy and money. Maybe your household has fought over the best strategy for cooling your space. Which is more efficient: running the air-conditioning all summer long without a break, or turning it off during the day when you’re not there to enjoy it?

We are a team of architectural and building systems engineers who used energy models that simulate heat transfer and AC system performance to tackle this perennial question: Will you need to remove more heat from your home by continuously removing heat throughout the day or removing excess heat only at the end of the day?

The answer boils down to how energy intensive it is to remove heat from your home. It’s influenced by many factors, such as how well your house is insulated, the size and type of your air conditioner, and outdoor temperature and humidity.

According to our unpublished calculations, letting your home heat up while you’re out at work and cooling it when you get home can use less energy than keeping it consistently cool—but it depends.

Blast AC all day, even when you’re away?

First, think about how heat accumulates. It flows into your home when the building has less stored heat than outside. If the amount of heat flowing into your home is given by a rate of  “1 unit per hour,” your AC will always have 1 unit of heat to remove every hour. If you turn off your AC and let the heat accumulate, you could have up to eight hours’ worth of heat at the end of the day.

It’s often less than that, though; homes have a limit to how much heat they can store. And the amount of heat that enters your home depends on how hot the building was to begin with. For example, if your home can store only 5 units of thermal energy before coming to an equilibrium with the outdoor air temperature, then at the end of the day you will only ever have to remove 5 units of heat at most.

 

Additionally, as your home heats up, the process of heat transfer slows down; eventually it reaches zero heat transfer at equilibrium, when the temperature inside is the same as the temperature outside. Your AC also cools less effectively in extreme heat, so keeping it off during the hottest parts of the day can increase overall efficiency of the system.

These effects mean there’s no one straightforward answer to whether you should blast the AC all day or wait until you get back home in the evening.

Energy used by different AC strategies

Consider a test case of a small home with typical insulation in two warm climates: dry (Arizona) and humid (Georgia). Using energy modeling software created by the U.S. National Renewable Energy Laboratory for analyzing energy use in residential buildings, we looked at multiple test cases for energy use in this hypothetical 1,200-square-foot home.

 

We considered three temperature strategy scenarios. One has the indoor temperature set to a constant 76 degrees Fahrenheit. A second lets the temperature float up to 89 degrees during an eight-hour workday—a “setback.” The last uses a temperature setback to 89 degrees for a short, four-hour workday.

Within these three scenarios, we looked at three different AC technologies: a single-stage central AC, a central air source heat pump (ASHP), and minisplit heat pump units. Central AC units are typical of current residential buildings, while heat pumps are gaining popularity due to their improved efficiency. Central ASHPs are easily used in one-to-one replacements of central AC units; minisplits are more efficient than central AC but costly to set up.

We wanted to see how energy use from AC varied across these cases. We knew that regardless of the HVAC technology used, the AC system would surge when the thermostat setpoint returned to 76 degrees, and also for all three cases in the late afternoon when outdoor air temperatures are usually the highest.

 

In the setback cases, we programmed the AC to start cooling the space before the resident returned, ensuring thermal comfort by the time they got home.

What we found was that even when the AC temporarily spikes to recover from the higher indoor temperatures, the overall energy consumption in the setback cases is still less than when maintaining a constant temperature throughout the day. On an annual scale with a conventional central AC, this could result in energy savings of up to 11%.

However, the energy savings may decrease if the home is better insulated, the AC is more efficient, or the climate has less dramatic temperature swings.

 

The central air source heat pump and minisplit heat pump are more efficient overall but yield less savings from temperature setbacks. An eight-hour setback on weekdays provides savings regardless of the system type, while the benefits gleaned from a four-hour setback are less straightforward.


Aisling Pigott is a PhD student in architectural engineering at the University of Colorado Boulder; Jennifer Scheib is an assistant teaching professor of building systems engineering at the University of Colorado Boulder; and Kyri Baker is an assistant professor of building systems engineering at the University of Colorado Boulder.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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