A 200 TR water-cooled chiller in operation rejects 700+ kW of heat through its condenser. In a typical Indian hotel running 8 hours/day cooling, that’s 5,600 kWh/day of waste heat — usually discarded through cooling towers + evaporation. Heat-recovery chillers capture some of this and supply it to domestic hot water (DHW) at 50-60 °C, replacing boiler / solar / electric heating with effectively free thermal energy.
For Indian hotels and hospitals where DHW demand runs concurrently with cooling demand (i.e., almost always), heat-recovery chillers reduce total operating energy by 20-35%.
How heat recovery works
A standard chiller has one condenser that rejects all heat to cooling tower. A heat-recovery chiller has either:
Architecture A: Double-bundle condenser
Two parallel condensers — one to cooling tower (always operating), one to DHW heat exchanger (engaged when DHW demand exists).
When DHW load > zero: refrigerant routes through DHW condenser first, water heated to 50-60 °C, then passes through cooling tower for any residual heat rejection.
Architecture B: Heat-recovery chiller (dedicated DHW model)
Single condenser, but at higher head pressure (designed for 65 °C condensing temp instead of 35 °C). All heat rejected through DHW HX.
Capacity penalty: Higher condensing pressure reduces compressor capacity 15-25% vs standard chiller. So a 200 TR cooling load needs a 240-260 TR heat-recovery chiller.
When heat recovery makes sense
Three conditions must align:
1. Concurrent DHW demand during cooling hours — yes for hotels/hospitals; no for offices (no DHW load to speak of)
2. Cooling load > minimum — heat-recovery chillers operate efficiently above 60-70% capacity; below that, conventional + separate DHW heater wins
3. Building consumes DHW > 5 m³/day — below that, the recovery infrastructure pays back too slowly
For typical Indian hotels: meets all three. For office buildings: typically not viable.
Sizing example: 200-key hotel in Mumbai
DHW demand: 200 keys × 200 L/day = 40 m³/day at 60 °C from 25 °C → 1,635 kWh/day thermal
Cooling demand: 200 TR × 8 hours = 1,600 TR-hours/day = 5,624 kWh refrigeration
Heat rejection at condenser:
- Standard chiller: ~1.15 × cooling load = 6,468 kWh/day
- Heat-recovery chiller: same total, but routed through DHW HX
DHW recovery available: 1,635 kWh/day required vs ~6,468 kWh/day available → 25% recovery utilization
Strategy: Heat-recovery chiller fully covers DHW + 75% of conventional condenser still rejects heat through tower
Capex premium: ~₹15-25 lakh for heat-recovery chiller vs standard
Operating savings: Eliminates ~₹15-20 lakh/year electric/boiler DHW cost
Payback: 12-18 months
Comparison: heat-recovery vs solar vs gas
For 100-key hotel with 20 m³/day DHW demand:
| Option | Capex | Annual savings | Payback | Renewable credit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conventional electric heater | baseline | — | — | None |
| Solar + electric backup | ₹50 lakh | ₹15 lakh | 36 mo | 4-5 GRIHA points |
| Heat recovery + electric backup | ₹25 lakh | ₹15 lakh | 18 mo | 2-3 GRIHA points |
| Solar + heat recovery + electric backup | ₹70 lakh | ₹22 lakh | 32 mo | 6-8 GRIHA points |
Heat recovery alone has fastest payback. Combined with solar gives both speed of payback + maximum sustainability points.
Hospital application
Hospital DHW demand higher (sterilization + laundry):
- 200-bed hospital: 50-80 m³/day at 60-70 °C
- Heat recovery viable across full year (cooling load year-round)
- Typically saves ₹30-50 lakh/year vs separate DHW system
Common heat-recovery design mistakes
1. Heat-recovery chiller as primary cooling without DHW load match. During low-DHW periods (early morning, weekends), chiller capacity penalty hurts.
2. DHW tank too small. Chiller condenser cycles on-off frequently; thermal stress on plates.
3. No backup heating for shoulder/winter cooling-off periods. Cold-only days (rare in India) leave hotel with no DHW.
4. Plate heat exchanger fouled by tank chemistry. Annual cleaning + chemistry control required.
5. No commissioning verification of recovery rate. Designer claims 1,635 kWh/day; actual measured 800 kWh/day due to imperfect controls.
Quick checklist
- [ ] Concurrent DHW demand during cooling hours verified
- [ ] Cooling load profile + DHW demand profile compared
- [ ] Heat-recovery chiller architecture (double-bundle vs HR-only) selected
- [ ] DHW thermal storage sized for peak demand + buffer
- [ ] Capacity penalty (15-25%) included in chiller sizing
- [ ] Backup DHW heating for low-cooling periods
- [ ] PHE selection with Ti or 316L corrosion-resistant plates
- [ ] Annual maintenance + cleaning schedule
- [ ] Commissioning verification of actual recovery rate
References: ASHRAE Handbook HVAC Sys & Eqp 2024 Ch 13 (Hydronic Heating + Cooling); IS 8148 (Centrifugal Pumps); ISHRAE Handbook 2024 Vol 4.
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